Abstract

Using Internet of Things (IoT) applications has been a growing trend in the last few years. They have been deployed in several areas of life, including secure and sensitive sectors, such as the military and health. In these sectors, sensory data is the main factor in any decision-making process. This introduces the need to ensure the integrity of data. Secure techniques are needed to detect any data injection attempt before catastrophic effects happen. Sensors have limited computational and power resources. This limitation creates a challenge to design a security mechanism that is both secure and energy-efficient. This work presents a Randomized Watermarking Filtering Scheme (RWFS) for IoT applications that provides en-route filtering to remove any injected data at an early stage of the communication. Filtering injected data is based on a watermark that is generated from the original data and embedded directly in random places throughout the packet’s payload. The scheme uses homomorphic encryption techniques to conceal the report’s measurement from any adversary. The advantage of homomorphic encryption is that it allows the data to be aggregated and, thus, decreases the packet’s size. The results of our proposed scheme prove that it improves the security and energy consumption of the system as it mitigates some of the limitations in the existing works.

Highlights

  • The Internet of Things (IoT) is an ecosystem that interconnects “smart” objects that are connected to the internet [1]

  • We evaluate the performance of the Randomized Watermarking Filtering Scheme (RWFS) scheme against the work presented by Cui et al in [22]

  • IoT applications play a major role in building new solutions for various real-world problems

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Summary

Introduction

The Internet of Things (IoT) is an ecosystem that interconnects “smart” objects that are connected to the internet [1]. Networks (WSN) are considered one of the main enabling technologies for this layer [3,4] They are composed of low-power sensor nodes that have limited computational and storing capabilities and a powerful base station (BS) [5]. Wireless sensor networks are used in a wide range of applications, such as environmental monitoring and control, health care systems, office automation, and home control [3,6]. In these applications, sensors share their data through the shared wireless medium [3]

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