Publication | Open Access
Power Consumption-based Detection of Sabotage Attacks in Additive Manufacturing
17
Citations
12
References
2017
Year
EngineeringDesktop 3DRuntime VerificationInformation SecurityAutomationProcess MonitoringComputer EngineeringEducationInformation ForensicsSystems EngineeringControl System SecurityAdvanced ManufacturingAm ProcessCps SecurityTechnologyData SecurityProcess SafetyMisbehaviour Detection
Additive Manufacturing (AM), a.k.a. 3D Printing, is increasingly used to manufacture functional parts of safety-critical systems. AM's dependence on computerization raises the concern that the AM process can be tampered with, and a part's mechanical properties sabotaged. This can lead to the destruction of a system employing the sabotaged part, causing loss of life, financial damage, and reputation loss. To address this threat, we propose a novel approach for detecting sabotage attacks. Our approach is based on continuous monitoring of the current delivered to all actuators during the manufacturing process and detection of deviations from a provable benign process. The proposed approach has numerous advantages: (i) it is non-invasive in a time-critical process, (ii) it can be retrofitted in legacy systems, and (iii) it is airgapped from the computerized components of the AM process, preventing simultaneous compromise. Evaluation on a desktop 3D Printer detects all attacks involving a modification of X or Y motor movement, with false positives at 0%.
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