Visible to the public Digital Audio Signature for 3D Printing Integrity

TitleDigital Audio Signature for 3D Printing Integrity
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsBelikovetsky, S., Solewicz, Y., Yampolskiy, M., Toh, J., Elovici, Y.
JournalIEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security
Pagination1–1
ISSN1556-6013
KeywordsAcoustic Fingerprints, Acoustics, additive manufacturing, composability, cyber security, Human Behavior, printers, pubcrawl, Resiliency, security, side channels, Solid modeling, Three-dimensional displays, three-dimensional printing
Abstract

Additive manufacturing (AM, or 3D printing) is a novel manufacturing technology that has been adopted in industrial and consumer settings. However, the reliance of this technology on computerization has raised various security concerns. In this paper, we address issues associated with sabotage via tampering during the 3D printing process by presenting an approach that can verify the integrity of a 3D printed object. Our approach operates on acoustic side-channel emanations generated by the 3D printer's stepper motors, which results in a non-intrusive and real-time validation process that is difficult to compromise. The proposed approach constitutes two algorithms. The first algorithm is used to generate a master audio fingerprint for the verifiable unaltered printing process. The second algorithm is applied when the same 3D object is printed again, and this algorithm validates the monitored 3D printing process by assessing the similarity of its audio signature with the master audio fingerprint. To evaluate the quality of the proposed thresholds, we identify the detectability thresholds for the following minimal tampering primitives: insertion, deletion, replacement, and modification of a single tool path command. By detecting the deviation at the time of occurrence, we can stop the printing process for compromised objects, thus saving time and preventing material waste. We discuss various factors that impact the method, such as background noise, audio device changes and different audio recorder positions.

URLhttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8410571
DOI10.1109/TIFS.2018.2851584
Citation Keybelikovetsky_digital_2018