CRJul 18, 2017

SECMACE: Scalable and Robust Identity and Credential Management Infrastructure in Vehicular Communication Systems

arXiv:1707.05518v178 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

It addresses the critical need for scalable and robust identity management in vehicular systems, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing standards and proposals.

The paper tackles the problem of deploying a secure and privacy-preserving Vehicular Public-Key Infrastructure (VPKI) for vehicular communication systems, presenting SECMACE, which improves security, privacy, and efficiency, with evaluation showing modest resources can support large areas with low delays and moderate overhead for privacy protection.

Several years of academic and industrial research efforts have converged to a common understanding on fundamental security building blocks for the upcoming Vehicular Communication (VC) systems. There is a growing consensus towards deploying a special-purpose identity and credential management infrastructure, i.e., a Vehicular Public-Key Infrastructure (VPKI), enabling pseudonymous authentication, with standardization efforts towards that direction. In spite of the progress made by standardization bodies (IEEE 1609.2 and ETSI) and harmonization efforts (Car2Car Communication Consortium (C2C-CC)), significant questions remain unanswered towards deploying a VPKI. Deep understanding of the VPKI, a central building block of secure and privacy-preserving VC systems, is still lacking. This paper contributes to the closing of this gap. We present SECMACE, a VPKI system, which is compatible with the IEEE 1609.2 and ETSI standards specifications. We provide a detailed description of our state-of-the-art VPKI that improves upon existing proposals in terms of security and privacy protection, and efficiency. SECMACE facilitates multi-domain operations in the VC systems and enhances user privacy, notably preventing linking pseudonyms based on timing information and offering increased protection even against honest-but-curious VPKI entities. We propose multiple policies for the vehicle-VPKI interactions, based on which and two large-scale mobility trace datasets, we evaluate the full-blown implementation of SECMACE. With very little attention on the VPKI performance thus far, our results reveal that modest computing resources can support a large area of vehicles with very low delays and the most promising policy in terms of privacy protection can be supported with moderate overhead.

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