Abstract

Vehicular ad-hoc networks allow vehicles to exchange messages pertaining to safety and road efficiency. Building trust between nodes can, therefore, protect vehicular ad-hoc networks from malicious nodes and eliminate fake messages. Although there are several trust models already exist, many schemes suffer from varied limitations. For example, many schemes rely on information provided by other peers or central authorities, for example, roadside units and reputation management centers to ensure message reliability and build nodes’ reputation. Also, none of the proposed schemes operate in different environments, for example, urban and rural. To overcome these limitations, we propose a novel trust management scheme for self-organized vehicular ad-hoc networks. The scheme is based on a crediting technique and does not rely on other peers or central authorities which distinguishes it as an economical solution. Moreover, it is hybrid, in the sense it is data-based and entity-based which makes it capable of revoking malicious nodes and discarding fake messages. Furthermore, it operates in a dual-mode (urban and rural). The simulation has been performed utilizing Veins, an open-source framework along with OMNeT++, a network simulator, and SUMO, a traffic simulator. The scheme has been tested with two trust models (urban and rural). The simulation results prove the performance and security efficacy of the proposed scheme.

Highlights

  • According to the road safety report released by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2018, the number of road traffic mortalities was 1.35 million.[1]

  • The advantage of vehicular ad-hoc networks (VANETs) is that vehicles are equipped with an on-board unit (OBU)[3] operating under IEEE 802.11p which makes it a preferable choice for enhancing intelligent transporting system (ITS)

  • We propose a novel trust management scheme for decentralized vehicular networks that overcomes the aforesaid limitations

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Summary

Introduction

According to the road safety report released by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2018, the number of road traffic mortalities was 1.35 million.[1]. Cryptography-based methods maintain messages integrity and afford confidentiality.[6] they are incompetent in providing messages quality and reliability[7] or recognizing untrusted nodes.[8] Recently, several VANET models have been developed They experience several limitations and encounter network degradation. The scheme tackles nodes’ legitimacy and message reliability, which qualifies it to be data-oriented and entity-oriented It operates in a dual-mode: urban and rural environments. The main contributions of our study are as follows: An autonomous trust management scheme, for self-organized vehicular networks, is proposed based on a crediting technique. The scheme measures the reliability of the messages based on two different approaches, urban and rural modes, and simultaneously it updates the history of the sender nodes. A qualitative comparison of the proposed method is exhibited in section ‘‘Comparison and discussion.’’ Section ‘‘Conclusion’’ concludes the article with our findings and future work

Related work
Findings
Comparison and discussion
Conclusion
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