RESEKRA: Remote Enrollment Using SEaled Keys for Remote Attestation
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Gómez Marín, Ernesto; Parrilla Roure, Luis; Mauro, Gianfranco; Escobar Molero, Antonio; Morales Santos, Diego Pedro; Castillo Morales, María EncarnaciónEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Remote attestation Edge computing Internet of Things (IoT) Embedded systems Trusted Platform Module
Fecha
2022-07-05Referencia bibliográfica
Gomez-Marin, E.; Parrilla, L.; Mauro, G.; Escobar-Molero, A.; Morales, D.P.; Castillo, E. RESEKRA: Remote Enrollment Using SEaled Keys for Remote Attestation. Sensors 2022, 22, 5060. [https://doi.org/10.3390/s22135060]
Patrocinador
Junta de Andalucía-Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades B-TIC-588-UGR20; Horizon 2020 Framework Programme 871518; European Regional Development FundResumen
This paper presents and implements a novel remote attestation method to ensure the
integrity of a device applicable to decentralized infrastructures, such as those found in common
edge computing scenarios. Edge computing can be considered as a framework where multiple
unsupervised devices communicate with each other with lack of hierarchy, requesting and offering
services without a central server to orchestrate them. Because of these characteristics, there are
many security threats, and detecting attacks is essential. Many remote attestation systems have been
developed to alleviate this problem, but none of them can satisfy the requirements of edge computing:
accepting dynamic enrollment and removal of devices to the system, respecting the interrupted
activity of devices, and last but not least, providing a decentralized architecture for not trusting in
just one Verifier. This security flaw has a negative impact on the development and implementation of
edge computing-based technologies because of the impossibility of secure implementation. In this
work, we propose a remote attestation system that, through using a Trusted Platform Module (TPM),
enables the dynamic enrollment and an efficient and decentralized attestation. We demonstrate and
evaluate our work in two use cases, attaining acceptance of intermittent activity by IoT devices,
deletion of the dependency of centralized verifiers, and the probation of continuous integrity between
unknown devices just by one signature verification.