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You're reading from  Automotive Cybersecurity Engineering Handbook

Product typeBook
Published inOct 2023
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781801076531
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser
Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser
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Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser

Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser is an automotive cybersecurity architect with a long experience in securing safety-critical systems. He started his career as a software engineer, building automotive network drivers, diagnostics protocols, and flash programming solutions. This naturally led him into the field of automotive cybersecurity, where he designed secure firmware solutions for various microcontrollers and SoCs, defined secure hardware and software architectures of embedded systems, and performed threat analysis of numerous vehicle architectures, ECUs, and smart sensors. Ahmad holds a B.S. and an M.S. in electrical and computer engineering from Wayne State University, as well as a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Michigan in Dearborn. He is currently a principal security architect for NVIDIA's autonomous driving software platform.
Read more about Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser

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Understanding control actions and layers

As with vehicle-level cybersecurity controls, ECU-level controls aim to detect, protect, and recover the ECU to a safe and secure state in response to ECU-level threats. As we mentioned in Chapter 7, in terms of the controls’ effectiveness in risk treatment, the control actions can be classified in this order:

  1. Protect: These controls prevent the attack from happening in the first place. For example, encrypting filesystems prevents private data exposure.
  2. Detect: These controls can effectively detect abnormal behavior. For example, authenticating the filesystem image allows the system to detect when it has been tampered with.
  3. Recover: These controls allow the system to recover to a secure state when an anomaly is detected. For example, upon detecting that a filesystem has been tampered with, a backup image is used to avoid an inoperable system.
  4. Log: These controls log the event to enable user notification and root cause...
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You have been reading a chapter from
Automotive Cybersecurity Engineering Handbook
Published in: Oct 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781801076531

Author (1)

author image
Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser

Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser is an automotive cybersecurity architect with a long experience in securing safety-critical systems. He started his career as a software engineer, building automotive network drivers, diagnostics protocols, and flash programming solutions. This naturally led him into the field of automotive cybersecurity, where he designed secure firmware solutions for various microcontrollers and SoCs, defined secure hardware and software architectures of embedded systems, and performed threat analysis of numerous vehicle architectures, ECUs, and smart sensors. Ahmad holds a B.S. and an M.S. in electrical and computer engineering from Wayne State University, as well as a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Michigan in Dearborn. He is currently a principal security architect for NVIDIA's autonomous driving software platform.
Read more about Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser