Exploring Selfish Trends of Malicious Mobile Devices in MANET
P.K.Suri, Kavita Taneja

TL;DR
This paper investigates malicious and selfish behaviors in mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs), analyzing their impact on network stability and evaluating existing prevention schemes to address these threats.
Contribution
It provides an analysis of selfish trends in MANETs and assesses the effectiveness of current prevention strategies against malicious behaviors.
Findings
Selfish behaviors can severely disrupt MANET connectivity.
Existing prevention schemes have vulnerabilities that can be exploited.
Malicious trends tend to spread, threatening network integrity.
Abstract
The research effort on mobile computing has focused mainly on routing and usually assumes that all mobile devices (MDs) are cooperative. These assumptions hold on military or search and rescue operations, where all hosts are from the same authority and their users have common goals. The application of mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) as open networks has emerged recently but proliferated exponentially. Energy is a valuable commodity in MANETs due to the limited battery of the portable devices. Batteries typically cannot be replaced in MANETs, making their lifetime limited. Diverse users, with unlike goals, share the resources of their devices and ensuring global connectivity comes very low in their priority. This sort of communities can already be found in wired networks, namely on peer-to-peer networks. In this scenario, open MANETs will likely resemble social environments. A group of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Ad Hoc Networks · Opportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Caching and Content Delivery
