Title
Toward securing tire pressure monitoring systems: A case of PRESENT-based implementation
Abstract
A Tire Pressure Monitoring System (TPMS) is a system that monitors the air pressure and temperature in the tires, and reports real-time information to the driver via wireless communication for vehicle safety and efficiency. On the other hand, several privacy issues regarding TPMS have been reported at the same time. Most of the current TPMSs do not support cryptographic modules for security of the transmitted data, due to limitation of resources or cost. We implement a lightweight protocol using a lightweight block cipher called PRESENT, and show this implementation fits resources of a typical TPMS. We implement a simple Enc-then-MAC paradigm, and show that the performance of our protocol matches a Tire Pressure Monitoring Sensor, e.g., NXP FXTH87 (8-bit CPU, 4MHz operating frequency, 8KByte ROM, and 512Byte RAM).
Year
Venue
Keywords
2016
2016 International Symposium on Information Theory and Its Applications (ISITA)
tire pressure monitoring systems,PRESENT-based implementation,TPMS,air pressure,real-time information,wireless communication,vehicle safety,vehicle efficiency,privacy issues,cryptographic modules,security of data,lightweight block cipher,Enc-then-MAC paradigm
Field
DocType
ISBN
Lightweight protocol,Wireless,Operating frequency,Block cipher,Computer science,Cryptography,Encryption,Tire-pressure monitoring system,Pressure monitoring,Embedded system
Conference
978-1-5090-1917-5
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Keita Emura131636.97
Takuya Hayashi215315.93
Shiho Moriai349443.89