Philippe Sébastien, d'Errico Francesco
Program on Science and Global Security, Princeton University, 221 Nassau St, 2nd floor, Princeton, NJ, 08542, USA.
School of Engineering, University of Pisa and National Institute of Nuclear Physics, Pisa, 56100, Italy.
Sci Rep. 2020 Nov 26;10(1):20605. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-77459-3.
Classical sensor security relies on cryptographic algorithms executed on trusted hardware. This approach has significant shortcomings, however. Hardware can be manipulated, including below transistor level, and cryptographic keys are at risk of extraction attacks. A further weakness is that sensor media themselves are assumed to be trusted, and any authentication and encryption is done ex situ and a posteriori. Here we propose and demonstrate a different approach to sensor security that does not rely on classical cryptography and trusted electronics. We designed passive sensor media that inherently produce secure and trustworthy data, and whose honest and non-malicious nature can be easily established. As a proof-of-concept, we manufactured and characterized the properties of non-electronic, physical unclonable, optically complex media sensitive to neutrons for use in a high-security scenario: the inspection of a military facility to confirm the absence or presence of nuclear weapons and fissile materials.
传统的传感器安全依赖于在可信硬件上执行的加密算法。然而,这种方法存在显著缺点。硬件可能会被操纵,包括在晶体管级别以下,并且加密密钥面临提取攻击的风险。另一个弱点是,传感器介质本身被假定为可信的,并且任何认证和加密都是在异地和事后进行的。在这里,我们提出并展示了一种不同的传感器安全方法,该方法不依赖于传统密码学和可信电子设备。我们设计了无源传感器介质,其本质上能够产生安全且可信的数据,并且其诚实和非恶意的性质能够轻易得到证实。作为概念验证,我们制造并表征了对中子敏感的非电子、物理不可克隆、光学复杂介质的特性,用于高安全场景:对军事设施进行检查以确认是否存在核武器和裂变材料。