CRMar 8, 2019

A Study on Smart Online Frame Forging Attacks against Video Surveillance System

arXiv:1903.03473v126 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses security vulnerabilities in smart city surveillance systems, which is an incremental improvement in cybersecurity for public safety.

The paper investigates a smart real-time frame duplication attack on video surveillance systems, demonstrating that attackers can forge video streams by replaying previously duplicated footage, and proposes a detection technique using electrical network frequency matching.

Video Surveillance Systems (VSS) have become an essential infrastructural element of smart cities by increasing public safety and countering criminal activities. A VSS is normally deployed in a secure network to prevent access from unauthorized personnel. Compared to traditional systems that continuously record video regardless of the actions in the frame, a smart VSS has the capability of capturing video data upon motion detection or object detection, and then extracts essential information and send to users. This increasing design complexity of the surveillance system, however, also introduces new security vulnerabilities. In this work, a smart, real-time frame duplication attack is investigated. We show the feasibility of forging the video streams in real-time as the camera's surroundings change. The generated frames are compared constantly and instantly to identify changes in the pixel values that could represent motion detection or changes in light intensities outdoors. An attacker (intruder) can remotely trigger the replay of some previously duplicated video streams manually or automatically, via a special quick response (QR) code or when the face of an intruder appears in the camera field of view. A detection technique is proposed by leveraging the real-time electrical network frequency (ENF) reference database to match with the power grid frequency.

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