Security: Computer scientists develop tool to make the Internet of Things safer
Computer
scientists at the University of California, San Diego, have developed a
tool that allows hardware designers and system builders to test
security- a first for the field. One of the tool's potential uses is
described in the May-June issue of IEEE Micro magazine.
"The
stakes in hardware security are high," said Ryan Kastner, a professor
of computer science at the Jacobs School of Engineering at UC San Diego.
There
is a big push to create the so-called Internet of Things, where all
devices are connected and communicate with one another. As a result,
embedded systems -- small computer systems built around microcontrollers
-- are becoming more common. But they remain vulnerable to security
breaches. Some examples of devices that may be hackable: medical
devices, cars, cell phones and smart grid technology.
"Engineers
traditionally design devices to be fast and use as little power as
possible," said Jonathan Valamehr, a postdoctoral researcher in the
Department of Computer Science and Engineering at UC San Diego.
"Oftentimes, they don't design them with security in mind."
The
tool, based on the team's research on Gate-level Information Flow
Tracking, or GLIFT, tags critical pieces in a hardware's security system
and tracks them. The tool leverages this technology to detect
security-specific properties within a hardware system. For example, the
tool can make sure that a cryptographic key does not leak outside a
chip's cryptographic core.
There are two main threats in hardware
security. The first is confidentiality. In some types of hardware, one
can determine a device's cryptographic key based on the amount of time
it takes to encrypt information. The tool can detect these so-called
timing channels that can compromise a device's security. The second
threat is integrity, where a critical subsystem within a device can be
affected by non-critical ones.
For example, a car's brakes can be
affected by its CD player. The tool can detect these integrity
violations as well.
Valamehr, Kastner, and Ph.D. candidate Jason
Oberg started a company named Tortuga Logic to commercialize this
technology. The company is currently working with two of the top
semiconductor companies in the world. Their next step is to focus on
medical devices, computers in cars, and military applications.
The
team recently were awarded a $150,000 grant from the National Science
Foundation to grow their business and further their research.
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