CRFeb 12, 2021

UAVs Path Deviation Attacks: Survey and Research Challenges

arXiv:2102.06638v11 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work identifies security gaps in UAV operations, highlighting critical vulnerabilities that need addressing for safe civilian applications.

The paper surveys path deviation attacks on UAVs, classifying them by flight mode and multiplicity, and finds that FPV mode has little security, spoofing is a major threat in GNSS mode, and GNSS+ and group movements lack specific defenses.

Recently, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) are employed for a plethora of civilian applications. Such flying vehicles can accomplish tasks under the pilot's eyesight within the range of a remote controller, or autonomously according to a certain pre-loaded path configuration. Different path deviation attacks can be performed by malicious users against UAVs. We classify such attacks and the relative defenses based on the UAV's flight mode, i.e., (i) First Person View (FPV), (ii) civilian Global Navigation Satellite System based (GNSS), and (iii) GNSS "plus" auxiliary technologies (GNSS+), and on the multiplicity, i.e., (i) Single UAV, and (ii) Multiple UAVs. We found that very little has been done to secure the FPV flight mode against path deviation. In GNSS mode, spoofing is the most worrisome attack. The best defense against spoofing seems to be redundancy, such as adding vision chips to single UAV or using multiple arranged UAVs. No specific attacks and defenses have been found in literature for GNSS+ or for UAVs moving in group without a pre-ordered arrangement. These aspects require further investigation.

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