NFV-based IoT Security for Home Networks using MUD
Yehuda Afek, Anat Bremler-Barr, David Hay, Ran Goldschmidt, Lior, Shafir, Gafnit Abraham, Avraham Shalev

TL;DR
This paper proposes a scalable ISP-level system architecture using NFV and MUD to secure IoT devices in homes, enabling upstream enforcement, device flow differentiation, and protection against DDoS attacks.
Contribution
It introduces an upstream enforcement approach at the provider network using NFV, extending MUD to handle P2P IoT communication, and demonstrates scalability with a national ISP.
Findings
System effectively monitors multiple home networks simultaneously.
The approach distinguishes device flows despite NAT limitations.
Proof of concept validated with a large national ISP.
Abstract
A new scalable ISP level system architecture to secure and protect all IoT devices in a large number of homes is presented. The system is based on whitelisting, as in the Manufacturer Usage Description (MUD) framework, implemented as a VNF. Unlike common MUD suggestions that place the whitelist application at the home/enterprise network, our approach is to place the enforcement upstream at the provider network, combining an NFV (Network Function Virtualization) with router/switching filtering capabilities, e.g., ACLs. The VNF monitors many home networks simultaneously, and therefore, is a highly-scalable managed service solution that provides both the end customers and the ISP with excellent visibility and security of the IoT devices at the customer premises. The system includes a mechanism to distinguish between flows of different devices at the ISP level despite the fact that most…
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