Author:
Rashid Mizanur,Haque Md. Musa,Wang Wei
Abstract
IoT privacy highlights the critical significance of tailored threat models to address the evolving challenges in the IoT landscape. This research paper presents an in-depth examination of privacy threat modeling in the context of the Internet of Things (IoT), and aims to develop threat models tailored to different IoT device categories, identifying vulnerabilities and potential privacy risks associated with each. This analysis seeks to provide insights into the diverse privacy challenges posed by IoT devices, ranging from wearables to healthcare IoT and smart home, which exhibit unique vulnerabilities and privacy risks. By developing threat models specific to each device category, this research elucidates the diversity of privacy concerns, such as data breaches, unauthorized access, and data tracking the applicability of privacy regulations varies across these categories, emphasizing the need for tailored regulatory frameworks. The research underscores the importance of user education and responsible device design, advocating for privacy literacy and transparency, as it ensures that privacy is an integral part of the development process, fostering a safer, more secure, and privacy-conscious IoT ecosystem where innovation and privacy coexist for the benefit of all.
Publisher
European Open Science Publishing
Reference16 articles.
1. Lohachab A, Jangra A. Opportunistic internet of things (IoT): demystifying the effective possibilities of opportunisitc networks towards IoT. 2019 6th International Conference on Signal Processing and Integrated Networks, SPIN 2019, pp. 1100–5, May 2019. doi: 10.1109/SPIN.2019.8711621.
2. Bibri SE. Ethical implications of Aml and the IoT: risks to privacy, security, and trust, and prospective technological safeguards. In The Shaping of Ambient Intelligence and the Internet of Things: Historico-Epistemic, Socio-Cultural, Politico-Institutional and Ecoenvironmental Dimensions, Paris: Atlantis Press, 2015, pp. 217–238. doi: 10.2991/978-94-6239-142-0_7.
3. Khan WZ, Aalsalem MY, Khan MK. Communal acts of IoT consumers: a potential threat to security and privacy. IEEE Trans. Consum Electr. Feb. 2019;65(1):64–72. doi: 10.1109/TCE.2018.2880338.
4. Risteska Stojkoska BL, Trivodaliev KV. A review of internet of things for smart home: challenges and solutions. J Clean Prod. Jan. 2017;140:1454–64. doi: 10.1016/J.JCLEPRO.2016.10.006.
5. Bisht RS, Jain NT. 2021 2nd I. Conference, and undefined 2021, “Study of wearable IoT devices in 2021: analysis & future prospects,” ieeexplore.ieee.org, Accessed: Nov. 28, 2023. Available from: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/9445334/?casa_token=9g-urgJ-7mIAAAAA:o0okdoB1bW85TN6_sgTbabvB7kRHoOlCUf2SSIzQ1nPH9un2Q7aFx-wmHBlYQauI9kQhkXD-8A.