Secure and Decentralized Swarm Behavior with Autonomous Agents for Smart Cities
Rafer Cooley, Shaya Wolf, Mike Borowczak

TL;DR
This paper introduces the SHARKS protocol, a secure, decentralized method for autonomous UAV swarms to operate in smart cities, enhancing security and coordination without central control.
Contribution
The paper presents the novel SHARKS protocol enabling secure, decentralized swarm behavior for UAVs in smart city environments, improving security and operational efficiency.
Findings
SHARKS protocol ensures secure, decentralized UAV swarm coordination.
Experiments demonstrate the protocol's stability and efficiency in various settings.
The protocol prevents central points of attack in swarm operations.
Abstract
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), referenced as drones, have advanced to consumer adoption for hobby and business use. Drone applications, such as infrastructure technology, security mechanisms, and resource delivery, are just the starting point. More complex tasks are possible through the use of UAV swarms. These tasks increase the potential impacts that drones will have on smart cities, modern cities which have fully adopted technology in order to enhance daily operations as well as the welfare of it's citizens. Smart cities not only consist of static mesh networks of sensors, but can contain dynamic aspects as well including both ground and air based autonomous vehicles. Networked computational devices require paramount security to ensure the safety of a city. To accomplish such high levels of security, services rely on secure-by-design protocols, impervious to security threats. Given…
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