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Security and Privacy in Communication Networks. 17th EAI International Conference, SecureComm 2021, Virtual Event, September 6–9, 2021, Proceedings, Part II

Research Article

Smartphone Location Spoofing Attack in Wireless Networks

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1007/978-3-030-90022-9_15,
        author={Chengbin Hu and Yao Liu and Zhuo Lu and Shangqing Zhao and Xiao Han and Junjie Xiong},
        title={Smartphone Location Spoofing Attack in Wireless Networks},
        proceedings={Security and Privacy in Communication Networks. 17th EAI International Conference, SecureComm 2021, Virtual Event, September 6--9, 2021, Proceedings, Part II},
        proceedings_a={SECURECOMM PART 2},
        year={2021},
        month={11},
        keywords={Location security Wireless signal External signal attack},
        doi={10.1007/978-3-030-90022-9_15}
    }
    
  • Chengbin Hu
    Yao Liu
    Zhuo Lu
    Shangqing Zhao
    Xiao Han
    Junjie Xiong
    Year: 2021
    Smartphone Location Spoofing Attack in Wireless Networks
    SECURECOMM PART 2
    Springer
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-90022-9_15
Chengbin Hu1,*, Yao Liu1, Zhuo Lu2, Shangqing Zhao2, Xiao Han1, Junjie Xiong1
  • 1: Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of South Florida, Tampa
  • 2: Department of Electrical Engineering, University of South Florida, Tampa
*Contact email: chengbin@usf.edu

Abstract

GPS-free outdoor localization becomes popular because of the expanding scale of WiFi deployments in metropolitan areas. As a substitution or complement to the Global Positioning System (GPS), WiFi localization systems provide very accurate results in WiFi-rich area. However, the current WiFi localization systems are not robust to WiFi external signal attack. In this study, we implement a reverse engineering model to decode the Android WiFi localization system output. With the aid of reverse engineering mode, we implement both static and dynamic external signal attacks to make the smartphone believing it is located in another location or moving along the attacker’s designed route using a portable programmed IoT device ESP8266. We also demonstrate that the WiFi based localization and navigation are vulnerable to external signal attacks by testing this attack on Android smartphone. Finally, we discuss the possible defense solutions and the future work. Our study indicates the smartphone is vulnerable to external signal attacks and there is an urgent need for defense solutions.

Keywords
Location security Wireless signal External signal attack
Published
2021-11-04
Appears in
SpringerLink
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-90022-9_15
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