Abstract
Federated Identity Management schemes (FIdMs) are of great help for traditional systems as they improve user authentication and privacy. In this paper, we claim that traditional FIdMs are mostly cumbersome and then ill-suited for IoT. As a solution to this problem, we came up with Federated Lightweight Authentication of Things (FLAT), namely a federated identity authentication protocol exclusively tailored to IoT. FLAT replaces weighty protocols and public-key cryptographic primitives used in traditional FIdMs by lighter ones, like symmetric cryptographic primitives and Implicit Certificates. Our results show that FLAT can reduce the data exchange overhead by around 31% when compared to a baseline solution. Also, the FLAT Client, the role played by an IoT device in the protocol, is more efficient than the baseline Client in terms of data exchange, storage, memory, and computation time. Our results indicate that FLAT runs efficiently, even on top of resource-constrained devices like Arduino.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have