Building Automotive Security on Internet Standards: An Integration of DNSSEC, DANE, and DANCE to Authenticate and Authorize In-Car Services
Timo Salomon, Mehmet Mueller, Philipp Meyer, and Thomas C. Schmidt

TL;DR
This paper presents a security framework for connected vehicles by integrating Internet standards DNSSEC, DANE, and DANCE to authenticate and authorize in-vehicle services, enhancing security and scalability.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach that leverages DNSSEC, DANE, and DANCE for automotive security, simplifying key management and ensuring interoperability with existing standards.
Findings
Effective authentication of in-vehicle services demonstrated in realistic setup
Security analysis confirms robustness against common threats
Scalable credential management for millions of vehicles
Abstract
The automotive industry is undergoing a software-as-a-service transformation that enables software-defined functions and post-sale updates via cloud and vehicle-to-everything communication. Connectivity in cars introduces significant security challenges, as remote attacks on vehicles have become increasingly prevalent. Current automotive designs call for security solutions that address the entire lifetime of a vehicle. In this paper, we propose to authenticate and authorize in-vehicle services by integrating DNSSEC, DANE, and DANCE with automotive middleware. Our approach decouples the cryptographic authentication of the service from that of the service deployment with the help of DNSSEC and thereby largely simplifies key management. We propose to authenticate in-vehicle services by certificates that are solely generated by the service suppliers but published on deployment via DNSSEC…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIPv6, Mobility, Handover, Networks, Security · Digital Rights Management and Security · Advanced Authentication Protocols Security
