Publications tagged with Vehicle to vehicle communications
Published:
Publications tagged with "Vehicle to vehicle communications"
- Campanile, L., Iacono, M., Marulli, F., & Mastroianni, M. (2021). Designing a GDPR compliant blockchain-based IoV distributed information tracking system [Article]. Information Processing and Management, 58(3). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ipm.2021.102511
Abstract
Blockchain technologies and distributed ledgers enable the design and implementation of trustable data logging systems that can be used by multiple parties to produce a non-repudiable database. The case of Internet of Vehicles may greatly benefit of such a possibility to track the chain of responsibility in case of accidents or damages due to bad or omitted maintenance, improving the safety of circulation and helping granting a correct handling of related legal issues. However, there are privacy issues that have to be considered, as tracked information potentially include data about private persons (position, personal habits), commercially relevant information (state of the fleet of a company, freight movement and related planning, logistic strategies), or even more critical knowledge (e.g., considering vehicles belonging to police, public authorities, governments or officers in sensible positions). In the European Union, all this information is covered by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). In this paper we propose a reference model for a system that manages relevant information to show how blockchain can support GDPR compliant solutions for Internet of Vehicles, taking as a reference an integrated scenario based on Italy, and analyze a subset of its use cases to show its viability with reference to privacy issues. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd - Campanile, L., Iacono, M., Levis, A. H., Marulli, F., & Mastroianni, M. (2021). Privacy regulations, smart roads, blockchain, and liability insurance: Putting technologies to work [Article]. IEEE Security and Privacy, 19(1), 34–43. https://doi.org/10.1109/MSEC.2020.3012059
Abstract
Smart streets promise widely available traffic information to help improve people’s safety. Unfortunately, gathering that data may threaten privacy. We describe an architecture that exploits a blockchain and the Internet of Vehicles and show its compliance with the General Data Protection Regulation. © 2003-2012 IEEE. - Campanile, L., Iacono, M., Marulli, F., & Mastroianni, M. (2020). Privacy regulations challenges on data-centric and iot systems: A case study for smart vehicles [Conference paper]. IoTBDS 2020 - Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Internet of Things, Big Data and Security, 507–520. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85089476036&partnerID=40&md5=c18dd73c221ec312a330521bf03d332e
Abstract
Internet of Things (IoTs) services and data-centric systems allow smart and efficient information exchanging. Anyway, even if existing IoTs and cyber security architectures are enforcing, they are still vulnerable to security issues, as unauthorized access, data breaches, intrusions. They can’t provide yet sufficiently robust and secure solutions to be applied in a straightforward way, both for ensuring privacy preservation and trustworthiness of transmitted data, evenly preventing from its fraudulent and unauthorized usage. Such data potentially include critical information about persons’ privacy (locations, visited places, behaviors, goods, anagraphic data and health conditions). So, novel approaches for IoTs and data-centric security are needed. In this work, we address IoTs systems security problem focusing on the privacy preserving issue. Indeed, after the European Union introduced the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), privacy data protection is a mandatory requirement for systems producing and managing sensible users’ data. Starting from a case study for the Internet of Vehicles (IoVs), we performed a pilot study and DPIA assessment to analyze possible mitigation strategies for improving the compliance of IoTs based systems to GDPR requirements. Our preliminary results evidenced that the introduction of blockchains in IoTs systems architectures can improve significantly the compliance to privacy regulations. Copyright © 2020 by SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved.