Presentation + Paper
12 April 2021 Zigbee as a candidate standard for use in anomaly detection in IoT LANs
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Zigbee is a popular specification for Internet of Things (IoT) mesh networking that provides a suite of protocols built on the IEEE 802.15.4 standard for radio communication. The Zigbee protocol stack is designed as series of layers each with a specific set of functions for communicating data throughout the network. These protocols provide a comprehensive functionality for performing various network tasks, including commissioning new networks and devices, performing broadcasting, unicasting, groupcasting with end-to-end acknowledgement, securing network traffic through AES-128 encryption, and full-packet message authentication. Security features of the Zigbee protocol alone may not be a complete solution for deploying secure IoT networks. It has some vulnerabilities and real-world attacks as discussed in this paper. Zigbee may be improved upon or added to for the purpose of securing it using real-time anomaly detection in IoT Local Area Networks (LANs).
Conference Presentation
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Alex Robbins, Waleed Farag, Xin-Wen Wu, and Pankaj Chaudhary "Zigbee as a candidate standard for use in anomaly detection in IoT LANs", Proc. SPIE 11751, Disruptive Technologies in Information Sciences V, 117510K (12 April 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2588155
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