Proceedings Article10.1145/1409944.1409960
Radio-telepathy: extracting a secret key from an unauthenticated wireless channel
Suhas Mathur,Wade Trappe,Narayan B. Mandayam,Chunxuan Ye,Alexander Reznik +4 more
- 14 Sep 2008
- pp 128-139
TL;DR: This paper presents a protocol that allows two users to establish a common cryptographic key by exploiting special properties of the wireless channel: the underlying channel response between any two parties is unique and decorrelates rapidly in space.
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Abstract: Securing communications requires the establishment of cryptographic keys, which is challenging in mobile scenarios where a key management infrastructure is not always present. In this paper, we present a protocol that allows two users to establish a common cryptographic key by exploiting special properties of the wireless channel: the underlying channel response between any two parties is unique and decorrelates rapidly in space. The established key can then be used to support security services (such as encryption) between two users. Our algorithm uses level-crossings and quantization to extract bits from correlated stochastic processes. The resulting protocol resists cryptanalysis by an eavesdropping adversary and a spoofing attack by an active adversary without requiring an authenticated channel, as is typically assumed in prior information-theoretic key establishment schemes. We evaluate our algorithm through theoretical and numerical studies, and provide validation through two complementary experimental studies. First, we use an 802.11 development platform with customized logic that extracts raw channel impulse response data from the preamble of a format-compliant 802.11a packet. We show that it is possible to practically achieve key establishment rates of ~ 1 bit/sec in a real, indoor wireless environment. To illustrate the generality of our method, we show that our approach is equally applicable to per-packet coarse signal strength measurements using off-the-shelf 802.11 hardware.
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Citations
A Survey on Wireless Security: Technical Challenges, Recent Advances, and Future Trends
Yulong Zou,Jia Zhu,Xianbin Wang,Lajos Hanzo +3 more
- 10 May 2016
TL;DR: The security requirements of wireless networks, including their authenticity, confidentiality, integrity, and availability issues, and the state of the art in physical-layer security, which is an emerging technique of securing the open communications environment against eavesdropping attacks at the physical layer are discussed.
Security of the Internet of Things: perspectives and challenges
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Classifications and Applications of Physical Layer Security Techniques for Confidentiality: A Comprehensive Survey
TL;DR: A conceptual, generic, and expandable framework for classifying the existing PLS techniques against wireless passive eavesdropping is proposed, and the security techniques that are reviewed are divided into two primary approaches: signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio- based approach and complexity-based approach.
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From RSSI to CSI: Indoor Localization via Channel Response, A survey on indoor localization using PHY-layer information
Yang Zheng,Zhou Zimu,Yunhao Liu +2 more
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: This article surveys the new trend of channel response in localization and investigates a large body of recent works and classify them overall into three categories according to how to use CSI, highlighting the differences between CSI and RSSI.
682
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Method and system for deriving an encryption key using joint randomness not shared by others
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TL;DR: The present invention relates to a method and system for deriving an encryption key using JRNSO (joint randomness not shared by others), which may be generated by using a Diffie-Hellman key derivation algorithm.
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TL;DR: Borders on the reduction of the Rényi entropy of a random variable induced by side-information are presented, showing that, except with negligible probability, each bit of side- information reduces the size of the key that can be safely distilled by at most two bits.