Secure data protection in the new internet of things
In a joint research project between universities and industry, computer scientists from Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg are working on further developing the Internet of Things. The aim of the project is to develop a more intelligent infrastructure for the Internet of Things (IoT), which combines device, data, and process management. Furthermore, new tools are being created that will revolutionize the design and development of applications considerably more simple, secure, and efficient.
The core idea of the team headed by Magdeburg project leader, Professor Dr. Mesut Güneş is to develop the self-organizing migration of services. This means that the services - such as home automation, data management, and business logic - no longer operate, as they have until now, centrally in a cloud, but instead can also act independently within a local infrastructure ecosystem. This local server infrastructure, which can also operate in small companies, or even on the computers of the user - or herself, guarantees full sovereignty over proprietary data. This allows companies to be independent of the server infrastructures of external service providers such as Google, Microsoft or Amazon, which are subject to constant changes and even may not be accessible.
“Smart devices can then operate with one another independently of the cloud and therefore work autonomously and fault-tolerantly,” says Güneş. “Due to the lack of need to share all data with the cloud, traffic and reaction time are reduced.” This means the development of a technology that enables statutory regulations and industry standards on data security, reliability and privacy to be implemented in the Internet of Things.
Bridge the gap
According to Professor Güneş, the background of the research project is the progressive digitalization of all areas of life due to changes in the way the Internet is used. “The Internet, as we know it, is based on network architectures from the 1970s and 1980s, when it was intended for entirely different applications.” Previous systems of access control were either centralized, and thus became bottlenecks, or not flexible enough to cope with the dynamism of the access authorizations.
In order to bridge this gap, as part of the project, concepts are being developed that allow for transparent access to the data. Project partner, Professor Sebastian Zug is convinced that “For the application it should make no difference whether the specific information requirement is answered by a server or an IoT node.”
“As a result, the systems benefit from one another, and can, for example, share computing capacities, data and so on,” explains Mesut Güneş. “A fast-growing data pool is being produced, which in turn makes it possible to produce considerably more accurate information, for example in the case of climate model forecasts, the observation of traffic flows or the management of large factories in Industry 4.0.”
In this way, the opportunities and possibilities of the Internet of Things can be better exploited and simultaneously the possible risks be more manageable.
The project partners of the DoRIoT project, which is funded in the amount of over two million euros by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) are:
- the Chair for Communication and Networked Systems at the University of Magdeburg (Professor Mesut Güneş),
- the Chair for Computational Intelligence at the University of Magdeburg, (Professor Sanaz Mostaghim),
- the Chair of Software Development and Robotics at the University of Freiberg (Professor Sebastian Zug),
- the Institute for Intelligent Buildings at Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences (Professor Matthias König),
- AKKA DSO GmbH and
- Thorsis Technologies GmbH.