Abstract

The number of Internet of Things (IoT) devices has increased recently and will increase further in the future. IoT devices are vulnerable, so vendors update and distribute firmware. At the time of firmware distribution, a huge number of IoT devices may connect to the firmware server and excessive network traffic may occur. Consequently, a method using a peer-to-peer file sharing system and a blockchain has been proposed. One study proposed an update scheme considering incentives for distributors to help with updating. However, this method requires the IoT devices, which have limited processing power, to decrypt encrypted files, and the distribution nodes to pay the transaction cost. This paper proposes a firmware distribution method that provides incentives for distributors to help with distribution to reduce the gas costs, using a smart contract and access control based on update records. The additional computations performed by IoT devices and distributors key management were reduced compared to those in previous studies by using access control instead of encryption. Further, the proposed approach was implemented and evaluated using a Raspberry Pi and laptop. The evaluation demonstrated that the gas cost per update was successfully lowered compared to the costs in previous studies.

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