Publications-Periodical Articles

Article View/Open

Publication Export

Google ScholarTM

NCCU Library

Citation Infomation

Related Publications in TAIR

題名 Strengthening Existing Internet of Things System Security: Case Study of Improved Security Structure in Smart Health
作者 洪為璽
Hung, Wei-Hsi
張智為
Chang, Chih-Wei
貢獻者 資管系
關鍵詞 Internet of things ; IoT security ; cybersecurity ; Internet of health things ; smart health
日期 2021.04
上傳時間 2021-07-21
摘要 Sensor applications and Internet of Things (IoT) technology using many sensors and smart devices (IoT devices) have been commercially implemented and are significantly changing our daily lives. However, most IoT devices are vulnerable due to low power consumption and have inadequate physical security protection mechanisms. The information security protection of existing sensors is very limited, particularly when large numbers of smart devices are deployed in smart application systems. This limited protection is a major information security concern and has become an important personal privacy issue. The study of the IoT architecture and security taxonomy in the beginning of this paper will help readers understand our proposed concept for improving the security level of existing systems without taking down the whole deployed system, which is the key contribution of this article. Through an actual case study, we have found that by improving the network planning and security management mechanism and applying network segmentation, monitoring, filtering, and IoT trust connection, we can strengthen the security protection of existing IoT systems. We demonstrated that raising the security level of existing smart health systems will increase market value both now and in the future, and ad hoc IoT security solutions can be feasibly deployed in all sensor application fields.
關聯 Sensors and Materials, Vol.33, No.4(2), pp.1257-1272
資料類型 article
DOI https://doi.org/10.18494/SAM.2021.3163
dc.contributor 資管系-
dc.creator (作者) 洪為璽-
dc.creator (作者) Hung, Wei-Hsi-
dc.creator (作者) 張智為-
dc.creator (作者) Chang, Chih-Wei-
dc.date (日期) 2021.04-
dc.date.accessioned 2021-07-21-
dc.date.available 2021-07-21-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 2021-07-21-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/136100-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) Sensor applications and Internet of Things (IoT) technology using many sensors and smart devices (IoT devices) have been commercially implemented and are significantly changing our daily lives. However, most IoT devices are vulnerable due to low power consumption and have inadequate physical security protection mechanisms. The information security protection of existing sensors is very limited, particularly when large numbers of smart devices are deployed in smart application systems. This limited protection is a major information security concern and has become an important personal privacy issue. The study of the IoT architecture and security taxonomy in the beginning of this paper will help readers understand our proposed concept for improving the security level of existing systems without taking down the whole deployed system, which is the key contribution of this article. Through an actual case study, we have found that by improving the network planning and security management mechanism and applying network segmentation, monitoring, filtering, and IoT trust connection, we can strengthen the security protection of existing IoT systems. We demonstrated that raising the security level of existing smart health systems will increase market value both now and in the future, and ad hoc IoT security solutions can be feasibly deployed in all sensor application fields.-
dc.format.extent 1310150 bytes-
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf-
dc.relation (關聯) Sensors and Materials, Vol.33, No.4(2), pp.1257-1272-
dc.subject (關鍵詞) Internet of things ; IoT security ; cybersecurity ; Internet of health things ; smart health-
dc.title (題名) Strengthening Existing Internet of Things System Security: Case Study of Improved Security Structure in Smart Health-
dc.type (資料類型) article-
dc.identifier.doi (DOI) 10.18494/SAM.2021.3163-
dc.doi.uri (DOI) https://doi.org/10.18494/SAM.2021.3163-