| P. Papadimitratos and Z.J. Haas, "Secure Message Transmission in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks," Elsevier Ad Hoc Networks Journal, vol. 1, no. 1, Jan/Feb/March 2003. |
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P. Papadimitratos and Z.J. Haas, "Secure Message Transmission in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks," Elsevier Ad Hoc Networks Journal, vol. 1, no. 1, Jan/Feb/March 2003.
No context found.
P. Papadimitratos and Z.J. Haas. "Secure Message Transmission in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks." Submitted for publication.
.... that certificates are bound with IP addresses is unrealistic; roaming nodes joining MANET sub domains will be assigned IP addresses dynamically (e.g. DHCP [Dro97] or even randomly (e.g. Zero Configuration [Hat01] A different approach is taken by the Secure Message Transmission (SMT) [Pap02a] protocol, which, given a topology view of the network, determines a set of diverse paths connecting the source and the destination nodes. Then, it introduces limited transmission redundancy across the paths, by dispersing a message into N pieces, so that successful reception of any M out of N ....
P. Papadimitratos and Z.J. Haas, "Secure Message Transmission in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks," submitted for publication.
....can be significantly more affected by a single misbehaving node. Furthermore, the availability of explicit connectivity information, present in link state protocols, has additional benefits: examples include the ability of the source to determine and route simultaneously across multiple routes [6], the utilization of the local topology for efficient dissemination of data [7] or efficient propagation of control traffic [8] Finally, a wide range of MANET instances is targeted by our design, which avoids restrictive assumptions on the underlying network trust and membership, and does not ....
....discovery; it does not guarantee that adversaries, which complied with its operation during route discovery, would not attempt to disrupt the actual data transmission at a later time. The protection of the data transmission is a distinct problem, which we address in a different publication [6]. 2.2. Overview To counter adversaries, SLSP protects link state update (LSU) packets from malicious alteration, as they propagate across the network. It disallows advertisements of non existent, fabricated links, stops nodes from masquerading their peers, strengthens the robustness of neighbor ....
P. Papadimitratos and Z.J. Haas. "Secure Message Transmission for Mobile Ad Hoc Networks." Submitted for publication.
.... the assumption that certificates are bound with IP addresses is unrealistic; roaming nodes joining MANET sub domains will be assigned IP addresses dynamically (e.g. DHCP [21] or even randomly (e.g. ZeroConfiguration [22] A different approach is taken by the Secure Message Transmission (SMT) [1] protocol, which, given a topology view of the network, determines a set of diverse paths connecting the source and the destination nodes. Then, it introduces limited transmission redundancy across the paths, by dispersing a message into N pieces, so that successful reception of any M out of N ....
P. Papadimitratos and Z.J. Haas, "Secure Message Transmission in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks," submitted for publication.
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