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802.16 Vulnerabilities

802.16 Vulnerabilities. Prasad Narayana , Yao Zhao, Yan Chen, Judy Fu (Motorola Labs). Lab for Internet & Security Tech, Northwestern Univ. Project Objective.

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802.16 Vulnerabilities

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  1. 802.16 Vulnerabilities Prasad Narayana, Yao Zhao, Yan Chen, Judy Fu (Motorola Labs) Lab for Internet & Security Tech, Northwestern Univ.

  2. Project Objective • Study the 802.16 system specifications with the goal of identifying any security vulnerability present in various functions/ processes documented. • Report any discovered vulnerability along with any proposed solutions.

  3. Project Tasks • Study of 802.16 (2004) Specifications • Discovery of security vulnerability (ies) • (If practical) Simulation of vulnerability situation (s) • Proposal of solution (s)

  4. Vulnerabilities discovered • Initial Ranging based Denial-of-Service attack • Service Interruption/ Denial-of-Service attack using TEK invalid message vulnerability

  5. Initial Ranging based Denial-of-Service attack

  6. What can an attacker do? If successful, the attacker can deny all Subscriber Stations, serviced by a BS within one of its sectors, entry into the network to send and receive user data

  7. Network Entry and Synchronization

  8. Initial ranging process • BS allocates contention-based initial ranging slots • Entering SS waits for its transmission opportunity and sends range request • BS evaluates ranging parameters and sends its response • If all is well, SS moves onto the next step, else it continues the ranging process till it has fine tuned all parameters.

  9. Frame Structure

  10. Attack Procedure (1) • Rogue SS adjusts its ranging parameters • Communication link between BS and its SS is brought down (e.g.: thru jamming) • Rogue SS waits for contention-based initial ranging slot announcement by the BS • Rogue SS sends a valid RNG-REQ message at every transmission opportunity of the initial ranging slot

  11. Attack Procedure (2) 4.Normal SSs detect collision whenever they attempt to send their RNG-REQ and hence, back off each time 5.This continues until the normal SS has exhausted ranging attempts in all valid channels, in the end, reports MAC initialization error

  12. Limitations of the Attack • Need to modify the MAC • To ignore the requirements of exponential back-off algorithm and transmit data in each transmission opportunity • Need tools for jamming • Need to fine tune the parameters • Much harder for OFDMA as it uses many ranging codes

  13. Attack Detection • Not straightforward • Need sophisticated detection mechanism based on data patterns from normal network behavior • As with other detection schemes, may not be always accurate

  14. Service Interruption/ Denial-of-Service attack using TEK invalid message vulnerability

  15. What can an attacker do? If successful, the attacker can either severely disrupt communication between an SS and BS or totally deny the SS a chance to communicate with the BS.

  16. Authorization State Machine of PKM protocol

  17. TEK State Machine of PKM protocol

  18. TEK invalid message properties • BS sends a TEK invalid message to an SS when it cannot decrypt an encrypted data frame sent by the SS • TEK invalid is unsolicited • TEK invalid is authenticated with the use of HMAC-Digest • TEK invalid message content may not change for a given SA session when AK and CID do not change

  19. State diagram for the attack

  20. Limitations of the Attack • Capability to inject messages both in uplink and downlink. • The messages injected should be capable of both overriding and corrupting valid messages coming from valid sources • Spoof packets • Can only attack one SS at a time

  21. Attack Detection • Stealthier than ranging based attack, hence harder to detect • Need sophisticated detection mechanism based on data patterns from normal network behavior

  22. Backup slides

  23. OFDM frame structure

  24. OFDMA frame structure with ranging sub-channel

  25. TEK invalid message structure

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