CRAug 25, 2018

Privacy in Internet of Things: from Principles to Technologies

arXiv:1808.08443v1109 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses privacy issues for individuals interacting with IoT systems, but it is incremental as it primarily reviews and maps existing concepts.

The paper reviews privacy principles, IoT architectures, and privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) to address privacy challenges in IoT systems, analyzing how legal principles can be implemented through PETs across IoT architecture layers.

Ubiquitous deployment of low-cost smart devices and widespread use of high-speed wireless networks have led to the rapid development of the Internet of Things (IoT). IoT embraces countless physical objects that have not been involved in the traditional Internet and enables their interaction and cooperation to provide a wide range of IoT applications. Many services in the IoT may require a comprehensive understanding and analysis of data collected through a large number of physical devices that challenges both personal information privacy and the development of IoT. Information privacy in IoT is a broad and complex concept as its understanding and perception differ among individuals and its enforcement requires efforts from both legislation as well as technologies. In this paper, we review the state-of-the-art principles of privacy laws, the architectures for IoT and the representative privacy enhancing technologies (PETs). We analyze how legal principles can be supported through a careful implementation of privacy enhancing technologies (PETs) at various layers of a layered IoT architecture model to meet the privacy requirements of the individuals interacting with IoT systems. We demonstrate how privacy legislation maps to privacy principles which in turn drives the design of necessary privacy enhancing technologies to be employed in the IoT architecture stack.

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