Earth Notes: On IoT Security and Privacy, Moving and Long-term Data (2015)

Updated 2022-09-30 12:00 GMT.
By Damon Hart-Davis.
How to provide appropriate protection for small Internet-of-Things devices and their data streams, on the air and at rest. #IoT #security
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Overview

(Part of WP1 Research, D16 Security. How to transmit data securely so that it can't be decoded by unauthorised people. Dummy info / no injection of unauthorised data. ED - Research standard IP based security mechanisms to ensure security in transit.)

We assume for this work that the Internet will not reach right to the leaf sensor/actuator nodes because they are not powerful enough to handle IP, or else will consume too much energy and silicon and cost more than necessary. Thus the security model looks something like this:

(Not in scope is anything beyond the handover to the data sinks.)

Security here is protecting privacy and safety and property against attack, eg:

Security does not always imply encryption; sometimes the important aspects are data integrity eg to minimise noise and errors in the system, or authentication eg to avoid allowing spoofing of data destined for public records.

(Note that there are plug-in security devices that can do or assist with authentication and encryption, and these may be especially valuable with leaf nodes if they (a) reduce code size and CPU load and (b) handle secure key management eg the keys are preshared in the hardware components. We may get to look at one of these devices later in the project.)

Security from Concentrator Onwards

In general this is likely governed by common-sense principles, eg:

Building Health

Bruno's (EnergyDeck CTO) note D16 2015-06-07...

# D16: Security #

Things to consider:
- authentication (identifying the sensor and who has access to it)
- encryption
- privacy policy (e.g. which data streams should be sent, which should not)
- tamper detection, such as:
  - sensor moved
  - battery removed

The tamper protection movement sensor and battery/restart counts are forwarded to D14 Sensor Set for further consideration.

Conclusions

As at 2015-06-15 a summary of the security framework to be followed is:

Appendix 1: Snapshot of Leaf-to-Concentrator Security Abstraction

This is a snapshot of the security thoughts/abstraction as to 2015-05-24 in Messaging.h with some minor reformatting:

The design aim is to allow transmission of (optionally secure) telemetry
from low-power sensor nodes over a number of alternate backhaul media
such as one-way packet-based ISM radios.

Assume that the leaf end is a low-powered CPU and so the code interface
and implementation has to be simple, and with minimal support from some
hardware for features such as encryption.

Assume that the messaging maximum possible frame size will generally be 64
bytes or less, and may vary significantly with the options chosen below,
especially if encryption is added.  Assume that some of the data carried
may be sensitive, eg privacy related or for driving actuators.

Assume that some implementations can/will not run below a specific integrity
level, eg with data checksums/CRCs.

Assume that the raw messaging transport is by default:
  * one way
  * lossy
  * noisy
  * bandwidth limited (low bit rate
    and/or (say) frames/day capped)
    and/or expensive per bit or frame
  * real-time but possibly with significant latency
  * overhearable, eg over ISM radio or similar.

(Some variants like TinyHAN allow two-way flows, and others may be radically
different such as tunneled in HTTPS over a LAN.)

Have one or more backhaul layers available at run-time leaf (with
superset at concentrator) with some constant capabilities, ie that can
be checked/selected at pref at compile time, such as:

  * Frame formats that can be carried on this channel (1 or more):
      * JSON object {...} (compact ASCII7 subset,
        only printable chars 32--126
        ie with no linebreaks or other control).
      * Whitened binary (with no 0x00 or 0xff bytes),
        so limited-length runs of either bit,
        and both values possible as delimiters.
      * Structured binary (as interpreted by underlying channel
        eg with TinyHAN).
      * Pure binary.

  * Ability to mark some frames as 'important' (bool),
    eg containing critical or changed values,
    with extra delivery effort (eg double TX or FEC).

  * Maximum data integrity protection available from the channel (enum / small
int):
      * CHECK: (required) simple frame check value applied and verified,
        eg typically 7--16 bit check sum or CRC, or in the underlying medium.
      * SEQ: (optional) above plus small frame sequence number.
      * AUTH: (optional) above plus crypto-based authentication.
      * ENC: (optional) above plus encryption (eg AES-GCM or EAX).
      * ENCHIGH: (optional) above with enhanced security
        (eg longer keys and/or IVs etc) at cost of frame size and CPU.
    (Data receiver should usually check data for semantic/syntactic
    integrity etc also, especially if a low level is used here.)

    [DHD20150409: note that all current OpenTRV traffic is effectively sent at level CHECK.]
    [DHD20150409: dropped NONE at Jeremy P suggestion to reduce complexity.]

All systems should support at least JSON object and whitened binary
formats with a simple (CHECK) integrity check.  (Note that JSON formats
are assumed NOT optimal in bandwidth terms, and should generally not
be used for prolonged production deployments (use a binary format),
but the underlying medium may be able to make some optimisations such
as simple compression on the wire.)

All systems with privacy-related data must support encryption (ENC),
and/or have the ability selectively not to send sensitive data,
and/or the underlying backhaul must be able to guarantee ENC-level integrity
itself (eg tunnelling over HTTPS or VPN).

At run time (and possibly at compile time) it must be possible to discover
the maximum data frame size possible with the selected transmission
parameters.

Note that for higher integrity levels suitably-sized keys may have to
have been pre-shared for example, and any modes not supported by the
concentrator may have to be removed to the 'available' list.

At run time it should be possible to specify above parameters with each
frame to send from leaf, and those parameters plus some associated values
(eg sequence numbers/range) should be recoverable.  Data that fails
integrity checks is in normal circumstances not available nor are crypto
keys used, though parameters such as algorithm and strength may be).

Note that key, IV, etc lengths that are acceptable in 2015 may prove
inadequate to future; to some extent that is implicitly dealt with outside
this definition by the key-sharing mechanism, but frame size limits may
ultimately limit available security.

See also:
http://blog.cryptographyengineering.com/2011/11/how-not-to-use-symmetric-encryption.html
http://crypto.stackexchange.com/questions/7951/aesctrhmac-encryption-and-authentication-on-an-arduino
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~jaein/papers/cs294_9_paper_fec.pdf
http://packetpushers.net/ipsec-bandwidth-overhead-using-aes/
http://nordsecmob.aalto.fi/en/publications/theses_2008/thesis_gabrielalimon_tkk.pdf
http://www.iacr.org/workshops/fse2010/content/slide/Fast%20Software%20AES%20Encryption.pdf
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4106
Public domain uNaCl crypto for AtMega: http://munacl.cryptojedi.org/ and
https://cryptojedi.org/papers/avrnacl-20130514.pdf
https://github.com/kokke/tiny-AES128-C (public domain)
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-38a/addendum-to-nist_sp800-38A.pdf

The assumption is that for small frames and with authentication/encryption done by the MCU, symmetric encryption with pre-shared keys is the most practical solution for protecting comms between leaf nodes and the concentrator. (In some cases the bearer provides the security, or it is not needed.)

GSM provides security over the air that is probably good but for all the most sensitive data for now, but the carrier has to be trusted if you don't provide authentication/encryption of the data inside the channel.

LoRa provides security over the air and additionally/separately security from end-node to final application, so the carrier does not have to be trusted.

Appendix 2: Security Assessment of the TRV

Tony Brookes kindly did an initial security assessment of OpenTRV itself, which may be one consumer of the Launchpad security outputs. Here is his note to me (2015-02-08), more or less verbatim (some reformatting):

The first time I used the OCTAVE approach and found it a waste of time. I
hope this attempt is not a total waste of time.


Open TRV initial security assessment.

Approach suggested in A Framework for Assessing and Improving the Security
Posture of Industrial Control Systems (ICS), Systems Network and Analysis
Centre, NSA, Pub: Aug 20, 2010, version 1.1

As the Open TRV project is an open source project, it is therefore assumed
that any and all of the technical details are freely available to anyone
who wants to download them or buy a unit. This assessment concentrates on
the attacks that can be carried out on the radio communications and what
information can be derived from intercepting, jamming or spoofing them.

Unknown: the range of the radio transmitter units, how the “family”
of devices in a house are considered unique or keyed to one boiler
control unit.

Assumption: The OpenTRV units and the boiler controller are not connected
to the Internet

Q1 - is the radio transmission encrypted, if so how is it implemented
and the key(s) managed?

Attack 1: Alter process status in transit: i.e. the unit transmits a
heat request to the central controller, which is somehow intercepted
and replaced by stay off instruction.
Likelihood: low Impact Over heated or under heated room(s), boiler firing
more or less than normal.

Attack 2: randomly request the boiler to fire or not.
Likelihood: Low unless there is a mechanism by which the boiler can
authenticate or know which requests are valid. It's unknown how complex
it would be to implement this, nor the overhead.

Attack 3: Denial of service attack on the system
Continually tell the boiler to either stay off (cold house) or run
(hot house). aim: disrupt the system and hence under the occupant's
uncomfortable.

Attack 4: Disable the device
It is thought more likely this would happen by battery failure or human
error than deliberate attack.
Likelihood: low Mitigation: clear instructions. widespread operational
testing in households with children and pets to increase the number of
potential different  for

Attack 5: install malicious software
Whilst this is a possible exploit it would require considerable skill
and expertise
Likelihood: Low, mitigation pot the processor chip:

Attack 6: Installation of the devices incorrectly
Likelihood: High (has already happened. Mitigation: clear instructions
and public liability insurance.

Question - does this system process any (sensitive) personal data?
The data concerned (boiler on or off) is not sensitive personal data as
defined in the Data Protection Act 1998. Additionally the data would
need to be combined with the dwelling address before anyone could
be identified. Even then, it is unclear what malicious uses the data
could be put to that simple observation of the house would also not
yield. (i.e. the data is considered equivalent to that in the public
domain).

Appendix 3: Security Advice from IotBoost

Dr Paul Galwas provided much useful advice 2014-10-06: see notes and email.

Along with many links and references the central point, which I've separately come to again, is that AES with Galois/Counter Mode (GCM) seems the way to go for encryption. Then maybe Galois Message Authentication Code (GMAC) for authentication only, where the underlying comms channel does not itself provide adequate security.

Some further informal remarks 2015-06-04 (lightly edited):

- General: looks good to me: some detailed comments below.

- General: I think there needs to be a section of key management that
includes: a) long-lived and transient keys, b) creation, c) destructions,
d) 'revoking' when compromised, e) lifetime, f) re-keying.
This might help:
https://developer.bluetooth.org/TechnologyOverview/Pages/LE-Security.aspx

- Overview: last para: I think that 'or authentication' is strictly 'or
authenticity of origin'.

- Appendix 1: I think that 'must support (ENC)' needs to be 'must support (ENC
& AUTH)', since ENC without mutual AUTH is fundamentally broken

- Overview: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5084 recommends IV of 12Bytes:
not sure whether this would work since I've not seen the data frame
structure. Uniqueness of IV is important to security.

- Overview: Note that 'IV' requires a plausible random source to be
effective, which is likely to be challenging on some limited platform.

- Max data integrity: is the comms mode set at installation, or
negotiated? If the latter, then take care that the protocol cannot be
fooled into downgrading the security level.

- Appendix 2: it might be worth also considering these threats
        Misuse of unprotected meta data (e.g. Address info)
        Accessing long-lived key(s), e.g. through theft or loss of device,
        possibly leading to other attacks, e.g. Remote spoofing?
        Replay attack, a) causing mistaken understanding of device reading(s);
        b) telling the device to do something wrong (including attacks 2,3,4).
        UI weaknesses, e.g. Relative to mistakenly using the wrong mode
        [probably covered in 6]

[...]

I think it's worth putting some lower bounds on bandwidth and packet sizes,
since below a certain threshold, the mechanisms are likely to have to be
somewhat different.

Not sure that the order of decrypt and error detection/correction is
defined: there's no point in decryption data with errors.

2015-06-23: I asked: "Do you see any obvious pitfalls in the scheme that I am proposing, ie using part of the device ID in the nonce and sending it in the ADATA section, which clearly leaks data about which devices may be transmitting and thus allows traffic analysis?"

To which Paul responded:

This is tricky: clearly wireless leaks knowledge of the transmissions, and
in a hub and spoke topology its not hard to guess where the traffic is
going (and probably not that interesting), especially when it's acked'.

Re traffic: you might find some inspiration from IPsec, which has a mode
that hides IP addresses.
Personally, I'd consider the threat in more depth: e.g. what information
exactly could be leaked? and who cares? And then seek other
countermeasures than encryption.

One idea would be to keep the packets a near the same as possible,
irrespective of the content.

If power were not an challenge, I'd consider sending 'random' packets.

However, low cost devices deployed in uncontrolled environments are easy
to obtain, for in-depth analysis: which potentially gives 'class-break'
information - to those who may have an interest.
So, it's important not to seek to put the bar too high; and mitigations
may come in unexpected ways and places.

Appendix 4: Initial AES-GCM Thoughts

2015-06-11 thoughts: for an AES-GCM-protected 64-byte radio data frame minus a few bytes of overhead, and with preshared 128-bit keys (thus making this AES-128), have the 12-byte nonce consist of:

for a total of 10 bytes of nonce/IV transmitted in each message, of which at at least the 4 bytes of ID and some of the message count are useful data and do not need to go within the message body. (Each node has 64 bits (8 bytes) of randomly-generated ID, of which a variable-length prefix is used, currently 2 bytes with OpenTRV FS20 comms for example.)

Adding 16 bytes of tag/authenticator gets to 26 bytes of raw overhead. (It may be possible to trim the (transmitted) nonce a little further, or even to trim the tag, without significant security compromise.) So half the raw frame is still available.

(See 2015-12 draft secure frame spec.)

Note that since the pre-shared keys for leaf nodes are likely to be very long-lived, and avoiding reuse of nonce/IV is critical to AES-GCM security, these details are critical.

The current AVR-based OpenTRV hardware seems able to gather entropy reasonably well for the purposes of generating a random ID. It would not need to for key generation if secret keys are supplied to it. No further randomness is actually needed in the nonce/IV scheme above.

2015-06-11: it appears that an 8-byte tag is possible with AES-128 GCM, which would get overhead down to 18 bytes, or about 1/3rd of the maximum frame size. JDK complains with java.security.InvalidAlgorithmParameterException: Unsupported TLen value; must be one of {128, 120, 112, 104, 96} when asked for an 8-byte tag with Cipher.getInstance("AES/GCM/NoPadding", "SunJCE") but works with a 12-byte tag (96 bits), corresponding to 22 bytes total overhead on a protected frame. Note that security (effective key length) is likely reduced to 96 bits in this case however.

2015-06-14: a couple of days' work based on a liberally-licensed (BSD) AES-GCM implementations available produced a 14kb (down from 16kB originally) Arduino UNO version that agrees (for a simple test case) with a Java-based unit test. The existence of very small AES implementations such as tiny-AES128-C suggest that implementations with lower code/data (Flash/RAM) requirements are plausible. Something ≤4kB code and ≤512B RAM would probably be possible and usable.

Assuming that the overall scheme is satisfactory, side-channel attacks such as some variant of timing or RF/EMI leak power, etc, will need to be checked for as code approaches production status.

(Note that the leaf MCU will probably need to be set up with 'conservative' 'fuse' setting to protect the keys from being extracted from the device, and that those keys may be safer hidden in Flash than EEPROM on some MCUs whose EEPROM can be read out without being cleared by loading new code, and there will be many other subtle foibles of particular devices.)

AESGCMV0p1 proof-of-concept AES-GCM Arduino code

Appendix 5: Initial Sensor-data Anti-tamper Thoughts

2015-06-12 I suggested to the dev list:

... where we need to verify at some future point that sensor data points have not been tampered with, that we do the following:

  • Use the authentication mechanism between leaf/sensor and concentrator to confirm that data got to the concentrator intact.
  • Have the concentrator by default sign with a private key (for which the public part is retained) any incoming data that it has authenticated as above.

So the leaf does not have to support keys good enough for long-term use for example.

To which Bruno (EnergyDeck CTO) responded:

That's a good start. I would suggest the following for specialised use cases (where people are possibly happy to pay more):

  • Have some sort of movement detection so that the sensor can send an event if it is moved. This can be essential for sensors in industrial environments where it is essential to ensure that once the sensor is installed it is not moved. The typical example we've seen is industrial cold storage where sensors are installed to prove that the temperature in the fridge is always within legal limits. One typical tampering in such cases is to move the sensor from one "problematic" fridge to a less problematic one.
  • Have a way to keep the device powered for a few seconds when batteries are removed so that a "battery removed" event can be sent before dying altogether. The concentrator itself could auto-detect sensors that stop sending data but when that happens it can be for a number of reasons, some of them completely legit.

In addition, the following metrics could help a concentrator / data platform identify sensors that need attention before something bad happens:

  • battery voltage: can then be used to predict when replacement is needed,
  • data link quality: can then be used to identify sensors with weak connections that are at risk of disconnection.

(mCube Introduces Accelerometers Optimized for the 'Internet of Moving Things'... which may also be good for things get moved that should not.)

~2907 words.