Distributed Intrusion Detection of Byzantine Attacks in Wireless Networks with Random Linear Network Coding
Jen-Yeu Chen, Yi-ying Tseng

TL;DR
This paper presents a distributed hierarchical algorithm utilizing random linear network coding to detect, locate, and isolate malicious Byzantine nodes in wireless networks, enhancing security and reliability.
Contribution
It introduces a novel distributed detection method specifically designed for Byzantine attacks in network coding-enabled wireless networks.
Findings
Effective detection of malicious nodes demonstrated
Improved network security against Byzantine attacks
Enhanced network reliability and integrity
Abstract
Network coding is an elegant technique where, instead of simply relaying the packets of information they receive, the nodes of a network are allowed to combine \emph{several} packets together for transmission and this technique can be used to achieve the maximum possible information flow in a network and save the needed number of packet transmissions. Moreover, in an energy-constraint wireless network such as Wireless Sensor Network (a typical type of wireless ad hoc network), applying network coding to reduce the number of wireless transmissions can also prolong the life time of sensor nodes. Although applying network coding in a wireless sensor network is obviously beneficial, due to the operation that one transmitting information is actually combination of multiple other information, it is possible that an error propagation may occur in the network. This special characteristic also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCooperative Communication and Network Coding · Wireless Communication Security Techniques · Full-Duplex Wireless Communications
