• Title/Summary/Keyword: Routing for Destination-location Privacy

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On Routing for Enhancing Destination-Location Privacy in Wireless Sensor Networks (무선 센서 네트워크에서의 도착지 위치 기밀을 강화하는 라우팅)

  • Tscha, Yeong-Hwan
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information and Communication Engineering
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    • v.14 no.7
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    • pp.1715-1722
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    • 2010
  • In this paper we consider methods for selecting the next tracing node that take advantage of the history of traced positions during the packet-tracing. In the meantime, the proposed routing strategy that counters the tracing is to design the routing path is such a way that nodes on it are not close to the nodes whose location privacy is needed and zigzag or back-and-forth movements hardly take place. In simulations, the ratios of successful tracing were largely improved. It was shown that our routing scheme allows more data packets to be delivered to the destination while, enticing the tracer to move more long distances in the presence of multiple assets.

Routing for Enhancing Source-Location Privacy in Wireless Sensor Networks of Multiple Assets

  • Tscha, Yeong-Hwan
    • Journal of Communications and Networks
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    • v.11 no.6
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    • pp.589-598
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    • 2009
  • In wireless sensor networks, a node that reports information gathered from adjacent assets should relay packets appropriately so that its location context is kept private, and thereby helping ensure the security of the assets that are being monitored. Unfortunately, existing routing methods that counter the local eavesdropping-based tracing deal with a single asset, and most of them suffer from the packet-delivery latency as they prefer to take a separate path of many hops for each packet being sent. In this paper, we propose a routing method, greedy perimeter stateless routing-based source-location privacy with crew size w (GSLP-w), that enhances location privacy of the packet-originating node (i.e., active source) in the presence of multiple assets. GSLP-w is a hybrid method, in which the next-hop node is chosen in one of four modes, namely greedy, random, perimeter, and retreat modes. Random forwarding brings the path diversity, while greedy forwarding refrains from taking an excessively long path and leads to convergence to the destination. Perimeter routing makes detours that avoid the nodes near assets so that they cannot be located by an adversary tracing up the route path. We study the performance of GSLP-w with respect to crew size w (the number of packets being sent per path) and the number of sources. GSLP-w is compared with phantom routing-single path (PR-SP), which is a notable routing method for source-location privacy and our simulation results show that improvements from the point of the ratio of safety period and delivery latency become significant as the number of source nodes increases.

Concealing Communication Source and Destination in Wireless Sensor Networks(Part I) : Protocol Design (무선 센서 네트워크에서의 통신 근원지 및 도착지 은닉(제1부) : 프로토콜 설계)

  • Tscha, Yeong-Hwan
    • The Journal of the Korea institute of electronic communication sciences
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.219-226
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    • 2013
  • Against the global eavesdropping in wireless sensor networks, tremendous amount of dummy packets for faking are likely to be continuously generated in order to keep the location privacy of the communication source and destination. In our approach only certain disk-shaped zones of encompassing sources and destination are allowed to issue dummy packets during the data transfer so that the amount of generated packets is reduced while the location privacy of the source and destination remains secret. To this end we design a routing protocol and propose a detailed formal specification of it, and verify major characteristics.

Routing for Enhancing Source-Location Privacy with Low Delivery Latency in Sensor Networks (센서 네트워크에서 낮은 전달 지연으로 근원지 위치 기밀을 강화하는 라우팅)

  • Tscha, Yeong-Hwan
    • The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences
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    • v.33 no.8B
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    • pp.636-645
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    • 2008
  • Most of routing schemes that protect the source's location from a malicious attacker usually make use of a path of a long length per message for the sake of lengthening the safety period. The biggest problem to such approaches is taking a very long latency in transferring messages to the destination. In this paper we show the problem to find the least-cost single path that is enough to keep the source-location always secure from the attacker, provided that it is used for the delivery of a set of messages given in priori, is NP-complete. Consequently we propose a routing protocol GSLP-w(GPSR-based Source-Location Privacy with crew size co) that is a trade-off between two extreme approaches. The advantage of GSLP-co lies in its enhanced safety period for the source and its lowered delivery latency in messaging. We consider NSP(Normalized Sefety Period) and NDL(Normalized Delivery Latency), measured in terms of the least number of hops to the destination, to achieve tangible interpretation of the results. We ran a simulation to confirm our claim by generating 100 topologies of 50,000 nodes with the average number of neighbors being 8. The results show that GSLP-$\omega$ provides more enhanced NSP compared to other protocols GSLP, an earlier version of GSLP-$\omega$, and PR-SP(Phantom Routing - Single Path), the most notable existing protocol for the source-location privacy, and less NDL than that of GSLP but more than that of PR-SP.

Location Privacy Enhanced Routing for Sensor Networks in the Presence of Dormant Sources (휴면 소오스들이 존재하는 환경의 센서 네트워크를 위한 위치 보호 강화 라우팅)

  • Yang, Gi-Won;Lim, Hwa-Jung;Tscha, Yeong-Hwan
    • Journal of KIISE:Information Networking
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.12-23
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    • 2009
  • Sensor networks deployed in battlefields to support military operations or deployed in natural habitats to monitor the rare wildlifes must take account of protection of the location of valuable assets(i.e., soldiers or wildlifes) from an adversary or malicious tracing as well as the security of messages in transit. In this paper we propose a routing protocol GSLP(GPSR-based Source-Location Privacy) that is capable of enhancing the location privacy of an active source node(i.e., message-originating node) in the presence of multiple dormant sources(i.e., nodes lying nearby an asset whose location needs to be secured). Extended is a simple, yet scalable, routing scheme GPSR(greedy perimeter stateless routing) to select randomly a next-hop node with a certain probability for randomizing paths and to perform perimeter routing for detouring dormant sources so that the privacy strength of the active source, defined as safety period, keeps enhanced. The simulation results obtained by increasing the number of dormant sources up to 1.0% of the total number of nodes show that GSLP yields increased and nearly invariant safety periods, while those of PR-SP(Phantom Routing, Single Path), a notable existing protocol for source-location privacy, rapidly drop off as the number of dormant sources increases. It turns out that delivery latencies of GSLP are roughly less than two-fold of the shortest path length between the active source and the destination.

Novel Two-Level Randomized Sector-based Routing to Maintain Source Location Privacy in WSN for IoT

  • Jainulabudeen, A.;Surputheen, M. Mohamed
    • International Journal of Computer Science & Network Security
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    • v.22 no.3
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    • pp.285-291
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    • 2022
  • WSN is the major component for information transfer in IoT environments. Source Location Privacy (SLP) has attracted attention in WSN environments. Effective SLP can avoid adversaries to backtrack and capture source nodes. This work presents a Two-Level Randomized Sector-based Routing (TLRSR) model to ensure SLP in wireless environments. Sector creation is the initial process, where the nodes in the network are grouped into defined sectors. The first level routing process identifies sector-based route to the destination node, which is performed by Ant Colony Optimization (ACO). The second level performs route extraction, which identifies the actual nodes for transmission. The route extraction is randomized and is performed using Simulated Annealing. This process is distributed between the nodes, hence ensures even charge depletion across the network. Randomized node selection process ensures SLP and also avoids depletion of certain specific nodes, resulting in increased network lifetime. Experiments and comparisons indicate faster route detection and optimal paths by the TLRSR model.