No Radio Left Behind: Radio Fingerprinting Through Deep Learning of Physical-Layer Hardware Impairments
2019; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers; Volume: 6; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1109/tccn.2019.2949308
ISSN2372-2045
AutoresKunal Sankhe, Mauro Belgiovine, Fan Zhou, Luca Angioloni, Frank Restuccia, Salvatore D’Oro, Tommaso Melodia, Stratis Ioannidis, Kaushik Chowdhury,
Tópico(s)Digital Media Forensic Detection
ResumoDue to the unprecedented scale of the Internet of Things, designing scalable, accurate, energy-efficient and tamper-proof authentication mechanisms has now become more important than ever. To this end, in this paper we present ORACLE, a novel system based on convolutional neural networks (CNNs) to “fingerprint” (i.e., identify) a unique radio from a large pool of devices by deep-learning the fine-grained hardware impairments imposed by radio circuitry on physical-layer I/Q samples. First, we show how hardware-specific imperfections are learned by the CNN framework. Then, we extensively evaluate the performance of ORACLE on several first-of-its-kind large-scale datasets of WiFi-transmissions collected “in the wild”, as well as a dataset of nominally-identical (i.e., equal baseband signals) WiFi devices, reaching 80-90% accuracy is many cases with the error gap arising due to channel-induced effects. Finally, we show through an experimental testbed, how this accuracy can reach over 99% by intentionally inserting and learning the effect of controlled impairments at the transmitter side, to completely remove the impact of the wireless channel. Furthermore, to scale this approach for classifying potential thousands of radios, we propose an impairment hopping spread spectrum (IHOP) technique that is resilient to spoofing attacks.
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