Visible to the public Hardware Identification via Sensor Fingerprinting in a Cyber Physical System

TitleHardware Identification via Sensor Fingerprinting in a Cyber Physical System
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsAhmed, C. M., Mathur, A. P.
Conference Name2017 IEEE International Conference on Software Quality, Reliability and Security Companion (QRS-C)
KeywordsAcoustic Fingerprints, Acoustics, attack detection, communication channel, composability, control engineering computing, CPS, CPS modeling, cyber physical systems, cyber security, Cyber-physical systems, cyberphysical system, deterministic model, fingerprint identification, hardware identification, Human Behavior, industrial control, industrial control systems, Noise measurement, noise pattern, Object recognition, physical attacks, process control, pubcrawl, realistic water treatment testbed, reference noise pattern, Resiliency, security, sensor fingerprinting, sensor measurements, simulation, Temperature measurement, threat models, ultrasonic level sensors, Ultrasonic variables measurement, Water Distribution Testbed
Abstract

A lot of research in security of cyber physical systems focus on threat models where an attacker can spoof sensor readings by compromising the communication channel. A little focus is given to attacks on physical components. In this paper a method to detect potential attacks on physical components in a Cyber Physical System (CPS) is proposed. Physical attacks are detected through a comparison of noise pattern from sensor measurements to a reference noise pattern. If an adversary has physically modified or replaced a sensor, the proposed method issues an alert indicating that a sensor is probably compromised or is defective. A reference noise pattern is established from the sensor data using a deterministic model. This pattern is referred to as a fingerprint of the corresponding sensor. The fingerprint so derived is used as a reference to identify measured data during the operation of a CPS. Extensive experimentation with ultrasonic level sensors in a realistic water treatment testbed point to the effectiveness of the proposed fingerprinting method in detecting physical attacks.

DOI10.1109/QRS-C.2017.89
Citation Keyahmed_hardware_2017