Visible to the public Lightweight Sybil-Resilient Multi-Robot Networks by Multipath Manipulation

TitleLightweight Sybil-Resilient Multi-Robot Networks by Multipath Manipulation
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsHuang, Y., Wang, W., Wang, Y., Jiang, T., Zhang, Q.
Conference NameIEEE INFOCOM 2020 - IEEE Conference on Computer Communications
Date Publishedjul
Keywordsbackscatter, batteryless backscatter tags, bulky multiantenna systems, Collaboration, collaborative tasks, composability, computer network security, featherlight backscatter tags, fictitious robots, fine-grained physical layer signatures, fundamental trust assumption, lightweight Sybil-resilient multirobot networks, lightweight system, Metrics, miniaturized robots, mobile robots, Multi-robot network, multi-robot systems, multipath manipulation, pubcrawl, radio links, radiofrequency identification, Resiliency, rich multipath features, Robot kinematics, Robot sensing systems, Robot Trust, robotic collaboration, ScatterID actively manipulates multipath propagation, single-antenna robot, Sybil attack detection, Sybil attackers, sybil attacks, telecommunication security, Trajectory, Wireless communication, wireless LAN, wireless medium, Wireless networking, Wireless sensor networks
Abstract

Wireless networking opens up many opportunities to facilitate miniaturized robots in collaborative tasks, while the openness of wireless medium exposes robots to the threats of Sybil attackers, who can break the fundamental trust assumption in robotic collaboration by forging a large number of fictitious robots. Recent advances advocate the adoption of bulky multi-antenna systems to passively obtain fine-grained physical layer signatures, rendering them unaffordable to miniaturized robots. To overcome this conundrum, this paper presents ScatterID, a lightweight system that attaches featherlight and batteryless backscatter tags to single-antenna robots to defend against Sybil attacks. Instead of passively "observing" signatures, ScatterID actively "manipulates" multipath propagation by using backscatter tags to intentionally create rich multipath features obtainable to a single-antenna robot. These features are used to construct a distinct profile to detect the real signal source, even when the attacker is mobile and power-scaling. We implement ScatterID on the iRobot Create platform and evaluate it in typical indoor and outdoor environments. The experimental results show that our system achieves a high AUROC of 0.988 and an overall accuracy of 96.4% for identity verification.

DOI10.1109/INFOCOM41043.2020.9155244
Citation Keyhuang_lightweight_2020