Visible to the public Examining the Effect of Wireless Sensor Network Synchronization on Base Station Anonymity

TitleExamining the Effect of Wireless Sensor Network Synchronization on Base Station Anonymity
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsWard, J.R., Younis, M.
Conference NameMilitary Communications Conference (MILCOM), 2014 IEEE
Date PublishedOct
Keywordsanonymity, base station anonymity, BS anonymity improvement, data sources, evidence theory analysis, location privacy, network traffic flow, Protocols, RBS, Receivers, reference broadcast synchronization, security mechanisms, Sensors, synchronisation, Synchronization, telecommunication network topology, telecommunication security, telecommunication traffic, timing-synch protocol for sensor networks, TPSN, traffic analysis techniques, Wireless communication, Wireless Sensor Network, wireless sensor network synchronization, Wireless sensor networks, WSN topology
Abstract

In recent years, Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) have become valuable assets to both the commercial and military communities with applications ranging from industrial control on a factory floor to reconnaissance of a hostile border. A typical WSN topology that applies to most applications allows sensors to act as data sources that forward their measurements to a central sink or base station (BS). The unique role of the BS makes it a natural target for an adversary that desires to achieve the most impactful attack possible against a WSN. An adversary may employ traffic analysis techniques such as evidence theory to identify the BS based on network traffic flow even when the WSN implements conventional security mechanisms. This motivates a need for WSN operators to achieve improved BS anonymity to protect the identity, role, and location of the BS. Many traffic analysis countermeasures have been proposed in literature, but are typically evaluated based on data traffic only, without considering the effects of network synchronization on anonymity performance. In this paper we use evidence theory analysis to examine the effects of WSN synchronization on BS anonymity by studying two commonly used protocols, Reference Broadcast Synchronization (RBS) and Timing-synch Protocol for Sensor Networks (TPSN).

URLieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6956760/
DOI10.1109/MILCOM.2014.39
Citation Key6956760