Power-Positive Networking

Author:

Chang Sang-Yoon1ORCID,Kumar Sristi Lakshmi Sravana2,Hu Yih-Chun3,Park Younghee4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, CO, USA

2. Advanced Digital Sciences Center, Singapore

3. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA

4. San Jose State University, CA, USA

Abstract

Energy is required for networking and computation and is a valuable resource for unplugged systems such as mobile, sensor, and embedded systems. Energy denial-of-service (DoS) attack where a remote attacker exhausts the victim’s battery via networking remains a critical challenge for the device availability. While prior literature proposes mitigation- and detection-based solutions, we propose to eliminate the vulnerability entirely by offloading the power requirements to the entity who makes the networking requests. To do so, we build communication channels using wireless charging signals (as opposed to the traditional radio-frequency signals), so that the communication and the power transfer are simultaneous and inseparable, and use the channels to build power-positive networking (PPN). PPN also offloads the computation-based costs to the requester, enabling authentication and other tasks considered too power-hungry for battery-operated devices. In this article, we study the energy DoS attack impacts on off-the-shelf embedded system platforms (Raspberry Pi and the ESP 8266 system-on-chip (SoC) module), present PPN, implement and build a Qi-charging-technology-compatible prototype, and use the prototype for evaluations and analyses. Our prototype, built on the hardware already available for wireless charging, effectively defends against energy DoS and supports simultaneous power and data transfer.

Funder

Agency for Science, Technology and Research

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications

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