Bridging the Security Gap: Lessons from 5G and What 6G Should Do Better
Isabella D. Lutz, Matthew C. Valenti

TL;DR
This paper reviews 5G security limitations, discusses future 6G security challenges, and offers recommendations to improve security, resilience, and robustness in 6G access and handover procedures.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of 5G vulnerabilities and proposes actionable security enhancements for 6G networks, focusing on access and handover procedures.
Findings
Identification of critical vulnerabilities in 5G access and authentication
Analysis of 6G security challenges related to device density and heterogeneity
Recommendations for securing 6G handover and access mechanisms
Abstract
The security requirements for future 6G mobile networks are anticipated to be significantly more complex and demanding than those of 5G. This increase stems from several factors: the proliferation of massive machine-type communications will dramatically increase the density of devices competing for network access; secure ultra-reliable low-latency communication will impose stringent requirements on security, latency, and reliability; and the widespread deployment of small cells and non-terrestrial networks, including satellite mega-constellations, will result in more frequent handovers. This paper provides a set of security recommendations for 6G networks, with a particular focus on access and handover procedures, which often lack encryption and integrity protection, making them more vulnerable to exploitation. Since 6G is expected to be a backward-compatible extension of 5G, and given…
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Taxonomy
TopicsICT Impact and Policies
