Kaspersky has announced a
newly patented technology designed to improve IoT security. The technology
logically links various electronic devices into a single network around the
account of the owner and identifies similarities between device configurations.
This will help to prevent any user devices from becoming a vector of attack on
another device or user data and will inform them if their configuration is
insecure.
According
to Deloitte, the number of electronic devices with a network interface
belonging to the same household or user has doubled in three past years. Similar growth,
however, can be also observed in attacks targeting IoT devices. This gives rise to the need for
technologies that will ensure the security of various and mutual
internet-connected devices and their owners.
A
single smart home usually consists of a number of devices, including home
appliances and wearables with different security integration capabilities, code
vulnerabilities and patch timing. So today, to keep a home safe from
cyberattacks, an owner of all these devices must dedicate special attention to
ensuring regular device patching, or configuring a secure device network that
isolates insecure gadgets from others.
The
patent "System and
method for analyzing relationships between clusters of electronic devices to
counter cyberattacks" issued by The US Patent and Trademark Office provides a new
method of facilitating cybersecurity management of IoT devices. It allows users
to detect every gadget belonging to the same network environment and to
correlate them with similar networks for further identifying actual or
potential cybersecurity gaps. Thus, if any device in the user's network is
insecure and has already been an attack vector or a similarly configured
network has been compromised, the technology will detect it and warn the user
or security solution about the possible danger.
While
conventional linking technologies rely on data that can be removed (such as
cookies) or on heuristics with inadequate accuracy, the Kaspersky invention
offers reliable and long-lasting linkage of devices, relating them to a profile
and operatively responding to a change in the user profile.
The
patented technology also ensures attribution of an unknown device to a cluster
of devices. This method implies defining of relationships between the gadget
and its surroundings and further applies the discovered patterns for
attributing other devices into the same cluster. A relationship between the
devices is determined using the computed similarity metric. This technology is
intended to help cybersecurity solutions analyze connected devices to further
understand if specific devices or the certain configuration of them pose any
risks, and also offers the kind of protection needed and provides it.
"The technologies of
linking devices is mostly used in marketing for learning consumer behavior," said Dmitry Ivanov, inventor of the
technology and intellectual property specialist at Kaspersky. "But as a cybersecurity company, we
saw that this functionality has a large potential in addressing the current
challenges of connected devices protection. Although the patented technology is
not yet implemented into Kaspersky solutions, we are exploring possible ways
for its application to make sure that it will advance IoT security to the next
level."
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