A Systematic Review of Bio-Cyber Interface Technologies and Security Issues for Internet of Bio-Nano Things
Sidra Zafar, Mohsin Nazir, Taimur Bakhshi, Hasan Ali Khattak,, Sarmadullah Khan, Muhammad Bilal, Kim-Kwang Raymond Choo, Kyung-Sup Kwak7,, Aneeqa Sabah

TL;DR
This paper reviews bio-cyber interface technologies for IoBNT, highlighting security and privacy challenges in connecting biological systems with digital networks, and suggests mitigation strategies for future designs.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of bio-cyber interfaces for IoBNT and identifies security and privacy vulnerabilities with potential mitigation approaches.
Findings
Bio-cyber interfaces include bio-electronic devices, RFID chips, and electronic tattoos.
Security vulnerabilities pose risks to biological data and privacy.
Mitigation strategies are essential for safe IoBNT deployment.
Abstract
Advances in synthetic biology and nanotechnology have contributed to the design of tools that can be used to control, reuse, modify, and re-engineer cells' structure, as well as enabling engineers to effectively use biological cells as programmable substrates to realize Bio-Nano Things (biological embedded computing devices). Bio-NanoThings are generally tiny, non-intrusive, and concealable devices that can be used for in-vivo applications such as intra-body sensing and actuation networks, where the use of artificial devices can be detrimental. Such (nano-scale) devices can be used in various healthcare settings such as continuous health monitoring, targeted drug delivery, and nano-surgeries. These services can also be grouped to form a collaborative network (i.e., nanonetwork), whose performance can potentially be improved when connected to higher bandwidth external networks such as…
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