LUCON: Data Flow Control for Message-Based IoT Systems
Today's emerging Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) scenarios are characterized by the exchange of data between services across enterprises. Traditional access and usage control mechanisms are only able to determine if data may be used by a subject, but lack an understanding of how it may be...
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Zusammenfassung: | Today's emerging Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) scenarios are
characterized by the exchange of data between services across enterprises.
Traditional access and usage control mechanisms are only able to determine if
data may be used by a subject, but lack an understanding of how it may be used.
The ability to control the way how data is processed is however crucial for
enterprises to guarantee (and provide evidence of) compliant processing of
critical data, as well as for users who need to control if their private data
may be analyzed or linked with additional information - a major concern in IoT
applications processing personal information. In this paper, we introduce
LUCON, a data-centric security policy framework for distributed systems that
considers data flows by controlling how messages may be routed across services
and how they are combined and processed. LUCON policies prevent information
leaks, bind data usage to obligations, and enforce data flows across services.
Policy enforcement is based on a dynamic taint analysis at runtime and an
upfront static verification of message routes against policies. We discuss the
semantics of these two complementing enforcement models and illustrate how
LUCON policies are compiled from a simple policy language into a first-order
logic representation. We demonstrate the practical application of LUCON in a
real-world IoT middleware and discuss its integration into Apache Camel.
Finally, we evaluate the runtime impact of LUCON and discuss performance and
scalability aspects. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1805.05887 |