Preserving Sink Location Against Global Traffic Monitoring Attacker for Wireless sensor Network

Author(s):  
D. V. Nayana
2014 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 135-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Friesen ◽  
Rory Jacob ◽  
Paul Grestoni ◽  
Tyler Mailey ◽  
Marcia R. Friesen ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Chitra Rajarama ◽  
Jagadeesha Narasimhamurthy Sugatoor ◽  
Yerri Swamy T

<span>A new method of sink location security in a Wireless Sensor Network is proposed. In the proposed scheme, all the node addresses are encrypted and an attacker cannot determine the real sink address by capturing the packets and analyzing its contents for the final destination. The main contribution of our proposed method is to use random routing scheme with misleading dead ends. This provides security against traffic analysis attack.</span>


Author(s):  
Chitra Rajarama ◽  
Jagadeesha Narasimhamurthy Sugatoor ◽  
Yerri Swamy T

A new method of sink location security in a Wireless Sensor Network is proposed. In the proposed scheme, all the node addresses are encrypted and an attacker cannot determine the real sink address by capturing the packets and analyzing its contents for the final destination. The main contribution of our proposed method is to use random routing scheme with misleading dead ends. This provides security against traffic analysis attack.


2012 ◽  
Vol 236-237 ◽  
pp. 1054-1066 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hai Feng Lin ◽  
Anna Jiang ◽  
Di Bai ◽  
Yun Fei Liu

A wireless sensor network consists of distributed devices which can monitor physical and environmental conditions and have a lot of applications, such as environmental monitoring, habitat monitoring, object tracking, nuclear reactor controlling, fire detection and traffic monitoring. Although it has a lot of potential applications, a wireless sensor network is highly energy constrained. Limited energy resource to the sensor becomes an obstacle for its applications and efficient usage of energy helps in improving the network lifetime. Suppose a network has a high-density of sensor nodes, there will be lots of problems such as the intersection of sensing, redundant data, communication interference and energy waste. So it is necessary to set up a management application to maintain these resources. On the other hand, a high-density network can be fault tolerant and more accurate than low-density sensor networks. In this paper, we proposed a new scheduling for sensor networks which can decide the nodes to be on or off and maintain the coverage area for the original one. This management schema may take a node out of service temporally in order to save energy. Our design uses a Voronoi Diagram, which decomposes the sensing area into regions around each node.


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