DocumentCode
1994883
Title
Location Privacy in Sensor Networks Against a Global Eavesdropper
Author
Mehta, Kiran ; Liu, Donggang ; Wright, Matthew
Author_Institution
Univ. of Texas at Arlington, Arlington
fYear
2007
fDate
16-19 Oct. 2007
Firstpage
314
Lastpage
323
Abstract
While many protocols for sensor network security provide confidentiality for the content of messages, contextual information usually remains exposed. Such information can be critical to the mission of the sensor network, such as the location of a target object in a monitoring application, and it is often important to protect this information as well as message content. There have been several recent studies on providing location privacy in sensor networks. However, these existing approaches assume a weak adversary model where the adversary sees only local network traffic. We first argue that a strong adversary model, the global eavesdropper, is often realistic in practice and can defeat existing techniques. We then formalize the location privacy issues under this strong adversary model and show how much communication overhead is needed for achieving a given level of privacy. We also propose two techniques that prevent the leakage of location information: periodic collection and source simulation. Periodic collection provides a high level of location privacy, while source simulation provides trade-offs between privacy, communication cost, and latency. Through analysis and simulation, we demonstrate that the proposed techniques are efficient and effective in protecting location information from the attacker.
Keywords
data privacy; telecommunication security; telecommunication traffic; wireless sensor networks; global eavesdropper; local network traffic; location information; location privacy; message content; sensor network security; strong adversary model; weak adversary model; Costs; Delay; Information analysis; Information security; Monitoring; Privacy; Protection; Protocols; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Network Protocols, 2007. ICNP 2007. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Beijing
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1588-5
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1588-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICNP.2007.4375862
Filename
4375862
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