Abstract
A smart city is where existing facilities and services are enhanced by digital technology to benefit people and companies. The most critical infrastructures in this city are interconnected. Increased data exchange across municipal domains aims to manage the essential assets, leading to more automation in city governance and optimization of the dynamic offered services. However, no clear guideline or standard exists for modeling these data flows. As a result, operators, municipalities, policymakers, manufacturers, solution providers, and vendors are forced to accept systems with limited scalability and varying needs. Nonetheless, it is critical to raise awareness about smart-city cybersecurity and implement suitable measures to safeguard citizens’ privacy and security because cyber threats seem to be well-organized, diverse, and sophisticated. This study aims to present an overview of cyber threats, attacks, and countermeasures on the primary domains of smart cities (smart government, smart mobility, smart environment, smart living, smart healthcare, smart economy, and smart people). It aims to present information extracted from the state of the art so policymakers can perceive the critical situation and simultaneously be a valuable resource for the scientific community. It also seeks to offer a structural reference model that may guide the architectural design and implementation of infrastructure upgrades linked to smart city networks.
Subject
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Computer Science Applications,Process Chemistry and Technology,General Engineering,Instrumentation,General Materials Science
Reference151 articles.
1. Smart cities survey: Technologies, application domains and challenges for the cities of the future;Mulero;Int. J. Distrib. Sens. Netw.,2019
2. Win, L.L., and Tonyali, S. (2021, January 15–17). Security and privacy challenges, solutions, and open issues in smart metering: A review. Proceedings of the 2021 6th International Conference on Computer Science and Engineering (UBMK), Ankara, Turkey.
3. Hamid, B., Jhanjhi, N., Humayun, M., Khan, A., and Alsayat, A. (2019, January 14–15). Cyber security issues and challenges for smart cities: A survey. Proceedings of the 2019 13th International Conference on Mathematics, Actuarial Science, Computer Science and Statistics, Karachi, Pakistan.
4. Sedinić, I., and Lovrić, Z. (2013, January 20–24). Influence of established information security governance and infrastructure on future security certifications. Proceedings of the 2013 36th International Convention on Information and Communication Technology, Electronics and Microelectronics (MIPRO), Opatija, Croatia.
5. Alromaihi, S., Elmedany, W., and Balakrishna, C. (2018, January 6–8). Cyber security challenges of deploying IoT in smart cities for healthcare applications. Proceedings of the 2018 6th International Conference on Future Internet of Things and Cloud Workshops (FiCloudW), Barcelona, Spain.
Cited by
28 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Security Threat Exploration on Smart Living Style based on Twitter Data;Engineering, Technology & Applied Science Research;2024-08-02
2. A Framework Towards Assessing the Resilience of Urban Transport Systems;Proceedings of the 19th International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security;2024-07-30
3. Mitigating Adversarial Attacks against IoT Profiling;Electronics;2024-07-05
4. Local Government Cybersecurity Landscape: A Systematic Review and Conceptual Framework;Applied Sciences;2024-06-25
5. Safeguarding the Future;Advances in Healthcare Information Systems and Administration;2024-05-28