Aleksandar Ignjatovic

2papers

2 Papers

CRApr 2, 2021
Trust-based Blockchain Authorization for IoT

Guntur Dharma Putra, Volkan Dedeoglu, Salil S Kanhere et al.

Authorization or access control limits the actions a user may perform on a computer system, based on predetermined access control policies, thus preventing access by illegitimate actors. Access control for the Internet of Things (IoT) should be tailored to take inherent IoT network scale and device resource constraints into consideration. However, common authorization systems in IoT employ conventional schemes, which suffer from overheads and centralization. Recent research trends suggest that blockchain has the potential to tackle the issues of access control in IoT. However, proposed solutions overlook the importance of building dynamic and flexible access control mechanisms. In this paper, we design a decentralized attribute-based access control mechanism with an auxiliary Trust and Reputation System (TRS) for IoT authorization. Our system progressively quantifies the trust and reputation scores of each node in the network and incorporates the scores into the access control mechanism to achieve dynamic and flexible access control. We design our system to run on a public blockchain, but we separate the storage of sensitive information, such as user's attributes, to private sidechains for privacy preservation. We implement our solution in a public Rinkeby Ethereum test-network interconnected with a lab-scale testbed. Our evaluations consider various performance metrics to highlight the applicability of our solution for IoT contexts.

LGMar 13, 2021
Simeon -- Secure Federated Machine Learning Through Iterative Filtering

Nicholas Malecki, Hye-young Paik, Aleksandar Ignjatovic et al.

Federated learning enables a global machine learning model to be trained collaboratively by distributed, mutually non-trusting learning agents who desire to maintain the privacy of their training data and their hardware. A global model is distributed to clients, who perform training, and submit their newly-trained model to be aggregated into a superior model. However, federated learning systems are vulnerable to interference from malicious learning agents who may desire to prevent training or induce targeted misclassification in the resulting global model. A class of Byzantine-tolerant aggregation algorithms has emerged, offering varying degrees of robustness against these attacks, often with the caveat that the number of attackers is bounded by some quantity known prior to training. This paper presents Simeon: a novel approach to aggregation that applies a reputation-based iterative filtering technique to achieve robustness even in the presence of attackers who can exhibit arbitrary behaviour. We compare Simeon to state-of-the-art aggregation techniques and find that Simeon achieves comparable or superior robustness to a variety of attacks. Notably, we show that Simeon is tolerant to sybil attacks, where other algorithms are not, presenting a key advantage of our approach.