Synthetic Generation of Realistic Signal Strength Data to Enable 5G Rogue Base Station Investigation in Vehicular Platooning

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Abstract

Rogue Base Stations (RBS), also known as 5G Subscription Concealed Identifier (SUCI) catchers, were initially developed to maliciously intercept subscribers’ identities. Since then, further advances have been made, not only in RBSs, but also in communication network security. The identification and prevention of RBSs in Fifth Generation (5G) networks are among the main security challenges for users and network infrastructure. The security architecture group in 3GPP clarified that the radio configuration information received from user equipment could contain fingerprints of the RBS. This information is periodically included in the measurement report generated by the user equipment to report location information and Received Signal Strength (RSS) measurements for the strongest base stations. The motivation in this work, then is to generate 5G measurement reports to provide a large and realistic dataset of radio information and RSS measurements for an autonomous vehicle driving along various sections of a road. These simulated measurement reports can then be used to develop and test new methods for identifying an RBS and taking mitigating actions. The proposed approach can generate 20 min of synthetic drive test data in 15 s, which is 80 times faster than real time.

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APA

Saedi, M., Moore, A., & Perry, P. (2022). Synthetic Generation of Realistic Signal Strength Data to Enable 5G Rogue Base Station Investigation in Vehicular Platooning. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 12(24). https://doi.org/10.3390/app122412516

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