Determining Distributions of Security Means for WSNs based on the Model of a Neighbourhood Watch
Benjamin F\"orster, Peter Langend\"orfer, Thomas Hinze

TL;DR
This paper proposes a method to determine the distribution of security measures in large-scale wireless sensor networks by modeling them as graphs and solving NP-hard problems with linear programming, supported by a new graph generator.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach using linear programming to analyze security distribution in WSNs modeled as graphs, including a new generator for realistic network simulation.
Findings
LPs can approximate security distributions in large WSNs
A new {\
Abstract
Neighbourhood watch is a concept that allows a community to distribute a complex security task in between all members. Members of the community carry out individual security tasks to contribute to the overall security of it. It reduces the workload of a particular individual while securing all members and allowing them to carry out a multitude of security tasks. Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are composed of resource-constraint independent battery driven computers as nodes communicating wirelessly. Security in WSNs is essential. Without sufficient security, an attacker is able to eavesdrop the communication, tamper monitoring results or deny critical nodes providing their service in a way to cut off larger network parts. The resource-constraint nature of sensor nodes prevents them from running full-fledged security protocols. Instead, it is necessary to assess the most significant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSecurity in Wireless Sensor Networks · Network Security and Intrusion Detection · Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
