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State of Connected Vehicle Security
October 04, 2017 | By Anand R. Prasad @ 3GPP/NEC
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We are pleased to share with you all an interesting article contributed by Anand R. Prasad who is information security leader experienced in developing successful businesses with over 20 years of proven professional track record. 

 

 

Anand R. Prasad 

Chairman of 3GPP security working group (SA3) and Chief Advanced Technologist at NEC

 

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Yesterday I gave a talk on V2X security for 4G as well as 5G and thoughts on surrounding aspects of security at escar Asia held at the beautiful hotel Gajoen in Tokyo. A very well organized conference with very informative talks and good participation by all parties concerned with connected vehicle. Several companies were showing their security solutions such as Escrypt, Trillium with complete security suite, Harman with several solutions etc.

 

  My observation after the two days was that there are several security solutions around but vehicle (connected or not) industry has still a lot to work on. As vehicles get more and more connected, vehicle industry will face issues beyond their normal comfort zone. The industry will have to take security considerations, at the least, for content, IoT, IT and telecom. 

This goes hand-in-hand with consideration of regulatory aspects in each field and each country.

 

While holistic security is a must, vehicle industry must not forget baseline security which includes secure design, secure coding, hardening (software, protocols etc.), patching, lifecycle etc. A minimum baseline security requirement should be set, be it by the industry or by the regulators, a global activity to make this happen is required.


Looking at connected vehicles already in market we know that the potential cyber-physical threats are a reality - a cyber attack leading to accidents in real-world. Thus security is essential for achieving safety! Obviously "safety" is key to vehicle business. Then again, in connected world safety should be redefined.

 

Today safety is measured by number of stars given after crash test and situation of passengers inside. Since connected vehicle started (day before yesterday?), safety should be defined by testing whether a given connected vehicle causes accident especially to a human on the street. This brings together the necessity to consider the whole aspect from many different angles such as cyber security protection, quality, insurance and regulations. This definition of safety for connected vehicle is needed.

 

Another aspect for connected vehicle is to consider security from all angles which includes system design but also business models and use cases (at-least near future). It is good that some in the industry has understanding of open source but different business models, use cases and lifetime of cars have their own implications on security. This is where secure network as a service becomes essential.

 

 

Secure network as a service can cater for needs or changing needs of a vehicle during its lifetime. Add hearable to it and you get biometric means with continuous authentication for additional services and enhanced security.

 


Finally, although I fear the USB stick that updates my car, I am still a fan of driving (of course safely :) and I look forward to the future with excitement.

 

 
     
Alexander via LinkedIn 2017-11-09 11:28:49

As we tend to be more dependent on network , the network availability itself becomes another security issue. Service disruptions or degradation may threaten our lives quite soon.

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