Survey on Enterprise Internet-of-Things Systems (E-IoT): A Security Perspective
Luis Puche Rondon, Leonardo Babun, Ahmet Aris, Kemal Akkaya, and A., Selcuk Uluagac

TL;DR
This survey comprehensively reviews the components, vulnerabilities, and security challenges of Enterprise Internet-of-Things (E-IoT) systems across four layers, highlighting gaps and open problems to guide future research.
Contribution
It provides the first complete overview of E-IoT system components, threats, and defenses, addressing a significant research gap in security analysis.
Findings
E-IoT systems are divided into four security layers.
Various attacks and defense mechanisms are identified per layer.
Open research problems in E-IoT security are highlighted.
Abstract
As technology becomes more widely available, millions of users worldwide have installed some form of smart device in their homes or workplaces. These devices are often off-the-shelf commodity systems, such as Google Home or Samsung SmartThings, that are installed by end-users looking to automate a small deployment. In contrast to these "plug-and-play" systems, purpose-built Enterprise Internet-of-Things (E-IoT) systems such as Crestron, Control4, RTI, Savant offer a smart solution for more sophisticated applications (e.g., complete lighting control, A/V management, security). In contrast to commodity systems, E-IoT systems are usually closed source, costly, require certified installers, and are overall more robust for their use cases. Due to this, E-IoT systems are often found in expensive smart homes, government and academic conference rooms, yachts, and smart private offices. However,…
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