Title
Key-sharing via channel randomness in narrowband body area networks: is everyday movement sufficient?
Abstract
We consider secure communication for Body-Area-Networks (BAN's). We examine the near-body radio channel of BAN's as a source of common randomness between two sensors. The movement of the subject and associated fading is used to hide a secure key from Eve. We examine recently approved radio channel models of the IEEE 802.15.6 Task Group, and show that the common randomness is too low rate for unconditional encoding. We find a key-generation rate around 2bits/second. We suggest the channel randomness may be better used in generating perpetually new keys for an AES-style encryption -- eg, a 128bits key every minute -- via a randomness scavenging procedure.
Year
DOI
Venue
2009
10.4108/ICST.BODYNETS2009.5941
BODYNETS
Keywords
Field
DocType
everyday movement,narrowband body area network,secure key,channel randomness,low rate,radio channel model,secure communication,common randomness,near-body radio channel,key-generation rate,perpetually new key,aes-style encryption
Key sharing,Narrowband,Fading,Computer science,Computer security,Communication channel,Encryption,Secure communication,Encoding (memory),Randomness
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
11
0.91
8
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Leif Hanlen19212.01
David Smith2110.91
Jian Andrew Zhang3465.11
Daniel Lewis4110.91