Close physical proximity among wireless devices that have never shared a secret key is sometimes used as a basis of trust. In these cases, devices in close proximity are deemed trustworthy while more distant devices are viewed as potential adversaries. Because radio waves are invisible, however, a user may believe a wireless device is communicating with a nearby device when in fact the user's device is communicating with a distant adversary. Researchers have previously proposed methods for multiantenna devices to ascertain physical proximity with other devices, but devices with a single antenna, such as those commonly used in the Internet of Things, cannot take advantage of these techniques. We investigate a method for a single-antenna Wi-Fi device to quickly determine proximity with another Wi- Fi device. Our approach leverages the repeating nature Wi-Fi's preamble and the characteristics of a transmitting antenna's near field to detect proximity with high probability. Our method never falsely declares proximity at ranges longer than 14 cm.
CITATION STYLE
Pierson, T. J., Peters, T., Peterson, R., & Kotz, D. (2018). Poster: Proximity detection with single-antenna IoT devices. In Proceedings of the Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking, MOBICOM (pp. 663–665). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3241539.3267751
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