Doc.: IEEE 802.15-04-0540-02 Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.15 Working Group for Wireless Personal.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Doc.: IEEE b Submission March 2005 Robert Cragie, Jennic Ltd.Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
Advertisements

Doc.: IEEE b Submission March 2005 Robert Cragie, Jennic Ltd.Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
Linear Confidential Linear Technology Response to RFP – ETSI TC ERM Request for Changes.
Doc.: IEEE b Submission November 2004 Robert Cragie, Jennic Ltd.Slide 1 NOTE: Update all red fields replacing with your information;
Doc.: IEEE a-Updating-15-7-security Submission May 2015 Robert Moskowitz, HTT ConsultingSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for.
Doc.: IEEE e Submission November 13, 2008 René Struik (Certicom Research)Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless.
Doc.: IEEE s Submission January 2015 Mineo Takai, Space-Time EngineeringSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
Submission January, 2005 Rene Struik, Certicom Corp.Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks.
Doc.: IEEE f Submission May 11, 2009 René Struik (Certicom Research)Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
July 2014doc.: IEEE Submission Qing Li (InterDigital) Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks.
Doc.: IEEE Submission September 2004 Poor, Shao et al: Ember, Mitsubishi Electric Research LabsSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working.
Doc.: IEEE /xxxr0 Submission Phil Jamieson November 2002 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission.
Doc.: IEEE /123r0 Submission February, 2002 Rene Struik, Certicom Corp.Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
Doc.: IEEE b Submission January 2005 Robert Cragie, Jennic Ltd.Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
Doc.: IEEE b Submission March 2005 Robert Cragie, Jennic Ltd.Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
Submission January, 2005 Rene Struik, Certicom Corp.Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks.
Doc.: IEEE b TG4b March 2005 Robert Poor - Ember CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
Doc.: IEEE Submission September 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
Doc.: IEEE e Submission Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Security.
Doc.: IEEE Submission March 17, 2005 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
Doc.: IEEE Submission July 2014 Li, Hernandez, Dotlic, Miura, NICT Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
Doc.: IEEE Submission September 2010 Hind Chebbo, FujitsuSlide 1 NOTE: Update all red fields replacing with your information; they.
Doc.: IEEE Submission November 18, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
Doc.: IEEE c SubmissionSlide 1 Qualcomm 2/29/2016 Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks.
November 2011 Jin-Meng Ho and David Davenport. doc.: IEEE Slide 1Submission Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
Doc.: IEEE Submission Oct Slide 1 Sangjae Lee (ETRI) et al Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
Doc.: IEEE xxxxx Submission doc. : IEEE Slide 1 Junbeom Hur and Sungrae Cho, Chung-Ang University Project: IEEE P
Doc.: IEEE Submission, Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Communicating.
Doc.: IEEE /250r0 Submission, Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: IEEE :
Doc.: IEEE e Submission July 2009 Andy Summers, Skip Ashton, EmberSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
Doc.: IEEE g Submission July 14, 2009 René Struik (Certicom Research)Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal.
November 2004 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [San Antonio Closing Report] Date Submitted:
June 16, 2018 doc.: IEEE r0 January, 2005
June 17, 2018 doc.: IEEE r0 January, 2005
Project: IEEE Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Proposals for adding a version number and for the treatment.
Project: IEEE Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Proposals for adding a frame version number and for the.
doc.: IEEE <doc#>
doc.: IEEE <doc#>
November 2017 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [AES-256 for ] Date Submitted:
Submission Title: [TG4b MAC backward compatibility]
October 2017 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [AES-256 for ] Date Submitted: [17.
doc.: IEEE <doc#>
October 2017 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [AES-256 for ] Date Submitted: [17.
May 2018 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Considerations on general MAC frame] Date Submitted:
November 18, 2004 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Security Resolutions] Date Submitted:
December 2, 2018 doc.: IEEE r0 May, 2004
September 2010 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [TG6 Proposed MAC comment resolution]
December 7, 2018 doc.: IEEE r0 July, 2003
September 2004 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Berlin Closing Report] Date Submitted:
Submission Title: [Comment Resolutions for #345, #347, #348, and #349]
< November, 2011 > Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [More Low Energy Mechanism Details]
May 2009 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [ 1-octet MAC Header frame types ] Date Submitted:
doc.: IEEE <doc#>
January 16, 2019 doc.: IEEE r0 September, 2004
November 18, 2004 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Security Resolutions] Date Submitted:
February 24, 2019 doc.: IEEE r0 July, 2003
January 2005 doc.: IEEE /0055r0 September 2005
May 2018 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Considerations on general MAC frame] Date Submitted:
January 2005 doc.: IEEE /0055r0 September 2005
Submission Title: LB Resolutions from kivinen
Submission Title: [Comment Resolutions for #345, #347, #348, and #349]
November 16, 2004 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Security Resolutions] Date Submitted:
doc.: IEEE <doc# >
doc.: IEEE <doc# >
July 15, 2019 doc.: IEEE r0 May, 2002 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [AES.
doc.: IEEE <doc#>
August 2019 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: CID 422 Proposal Date Submitted: 14 August,
August 2019 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: CID 422 Proposal Date Submitted: 14 August,
August 2019 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: CID 422 Proposal Date Submitted: 14 August,
September, 2019 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: CID 422 Proposal Date Submitted: Sept.
Presentation transcript:

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Security Resolutions] Date Submitted: [November 16, 2004] Source: [Rene Struik] Company [Certicom Research] Address [5520 Explorer Drive, Fourth Floor, Mississauga, ON, L4W 5L1, Canada] Voice:[ ], FAX: [ ], Re: [] Abstract:[This document proposes resolutions to a set of issues relating to the security suite in IEEE ] Purpose:[This document is submitted for consideration for revisions to the specification.] Notice:This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein. Release:The contributor acknowledges and accepts that this contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may be made publicly available by P

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 2 Security Resolutions Rene Struik (Certicom Research) New items/updates in blue

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 3 Compatibility issues is unclear about how to interpret reserved fields. Interpretation 1 Reserved fields may be ignored upon reception (don’t care approach) Consequence: Reserved fields cannot be given meaningful value, since this would break existing implementations. Interpretation 2 Reserved fields shall be set to zero. Consequence: Reserved fields can be given meaningful value, without breaking existing implementations. Subsequent interpretations still unclear: - Minutes Berlin meeting ( b) - Document Phil Beecher ( b) Proposal: Adopt interpretation 2, since it allows use of reserved fields for updates to

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 4 Eliminate ACL mode Description: ACL mode allows address filtering of incoming messages. Problem: This can also be realized via external mechanism. Proposal: Eliminate ACL mode. Address filtering can be realized by allowing rejection of frames based on additional out-of-scope checks. PAR Compliance: Remove complexity.

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 5 #14, #45: CCM* Description: The current 15.4 security suite is composed of three components: AES-CCM (for encryption and authentication), CBC-MAC (for authentication only), and AES-CTR (encryption only). Problem 1: These three separate components require a larger implementation (counted in gates or code) than the unified CCM* implementation. Problem 2: Switching between these modes compromises security unless you keep separate keys, which requires additional storage. Problem 3: CBC-MAC doesn’t provide freshness and is subject to replay attacks. Proposal: Replace security suite with CCM* as described in (replaces r0). (Note on backward compatibility: current specification allows devices to negotiate security, falling back to ‘no security’ as required.) PAR Compliance: “remove inflexible security use”

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 6 #30: What fields are authenticated? Problem: The IEEE spec is ambiguous or unclear as to what components of a packet are subject to authentication. Proposal: Authenticate MAC header and MAC payload, i.e. everything except the FCS. (Refer to figure 34 in ). Clarify wording as suggested in b. PAR Compliance: Resolving ambiguities. Guiding principle: - contiguous frame portions are authenticated, resp. encrypted

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 7 Eliminate Key Sequence Counter Problem: In practice, Key Sequence Counter serves no useful function (is always fixed at 0), and generates one byte overhead in each security-enabled frame. Proposal: Eliminate Key Sequence Counter. This increases over the air efficiency, reduces the size of the ACL tables, simplifies processing in CCM. (Note on backward compatibility: If this change is introduced as part of CCM* update, there will be no backward compatibility issue.) PAR compliance: Removing unnecessary complexity, reduce MAC overhead, MAC header compression.

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 8 #44: Security Endianess Clarification Problem: The definition of Least Significant Bit and Most Significant Bit is inconsistent between Section 7.6 and Annex B. Solution: Adopt solution presented in xxxx-00-security- endianess.doc PAR compliance: Resolve ambiguities. Update: Integers are represent as octet strings, in lowest-octet-first order and lowest-bit-first order

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 9 Broadcast Encryption Problem: Broadcast encryption does not provide freshness when using the default (broadcast) key, making the system subject to replay attacks. Proposal: Implement fix as described in document Receiver keeps track of the frame counter for each device sending to it using default key, similar to what is currently done for peer-to-peer traffic (which uses peer-to-peer keys). PAR Compliance: remove inflexible key usage, fix security holes, remove ambiguities

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 10 Which Key to use for Peer to Peer Problem: Node A may have a shared key to use with Node B. If node B lacks that shared key, it will try to use the default key (aka broadcast key) when receiving a packet from Node A, resulting in a decryption failure. Higher level code cannot determine why the decryption failed. Proposal: Explicitly identify key is not a function of source and destination device (see document ) PAR compliance: remove inflexible key usage, remove ambiguities, reduce complexities

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 11 Dynamic protection levels Problem: Nodes can only derive applicable security/protection level from statically maintained information, thus leading to unworkable broadcast encryption (if recipients have different security expectations) and high-cost system set-up Proposal 1: Differentiate applicable protection level on frame-by- frame basis; Proposal 2: differentiate minimum expected protection level Proposal 3: allow synchronization of expected protection levels on-the-fly PAR compliance: remove inflexible key usage, reduce complexities, reduce cost, reduce latency

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 12 Group keying and multicast Problem: secure broadcast is not possible, if devices would change key over lifetime; secure multicast is also not possible Proposal 1: Incorporate secure broadcast over network’s lifetime; Proposal 2: incorporate secure multicast (and unsecured multicast) See also PAR compliance: remove inflexible key usage, reduce complexities, reduce key storage cost, reduce latency, incorporate multicast See also b, Slides 6-8

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 13 Compress security overhead if possible Problem: security overhead is substantial (currently 5 bytes per secured frame). Proposal 1: reduce frame counter overhead from 4 to 1 (changed to: 2) bytes per frame Proposal 2: piggyback on DSN entry for reduction of frame counter size by 1 further octet (thus eliminating it) See also 02/474r2 and (still to be discussed, since has impact on frame receipt) PAR compliance: remove security overhead, reduce battery usage at no computational cost (1 integer increment only), eliminate risk of Denial of Service attack by insiders (!)

doc.: IEEE Submission November 16, 2004 Poor & Struik / Ember & CerticomSlide 14 Centralized frame counters Problem: frame counters depend on device and key, thus invoking quite a big key storage cost (Example: 16 RFD talk with coordinator using n versions of broadcast key  16 X n X 4=64 n bytes for frame counters) Proposal: centralize frame counters, such as to have these depend on device only (this requires #stored frame counter = # devices sending) See also PAR compliance: reduce storage requirements keying material