Enabling Fake Base Station Detection through Sample-based Higher Order Noise Statistics

Ali A, Fischer G (2019)


Publication Language: English

Publication Status: Accepted

Publication Type: Conference contribution

Future Publication Type: Conference contribution

Publication year: 2019

Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.

Pages Range: 695-700

Conference Proceedings Title: 2019 42nd International Conference on Telecommunications and Signal Processing, TSP 2019

Event location: Budapest, Hungary HU

ISBN: 9781728118642

DOI: 10.1109/TSP.2019.8769046

Abstract

This paper presents computationally efficient fake base station (FBS) detection scheme through higher order statistical analysis at the user equipment (UE) side. In the proposed RF fingerprinting detection scheme, the UE inspects surrounding base stations (BS) by first extracting noise from the received signal through novel sample-based parametric estimation technique and then measuring the noise structuredness with the aid of fourth order moment i.e. kurtosis over the estimated noise samples. This reveals unique RF fingerprints of the legitimized regular base station (RBS) in terms of hardware impairments and resultantly indicates minimal impact from the non-linearities due to employment of costly and high precision analog and mixedsignal components, strong network-synchronous clock and a sophisticated linearization effort around the power amplifier (PA). In contrary, FBS exhibits different RF fingerprints containing larger amount of non-linearities in the received signal due to presence of large impairments. With the help of actual measurement results from RBS and various software defined radio (SDR) based FBS at different cellular standards and by defining a critical threshold of detection, we show that an FBS deviates a lot from the ideal Gaussian noise distribution and constitutes of multivariate distributions, whereas an RBS show minimal deviation from the reference and contains univariate noise distribution. We further calculate the observation sample time required to detect an FBS in an optimal MMSE sense and indicate with the help of results that the minimum time to identify a fake cell is 10ms.

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How to cite

APA:

Ali, A., & Fischer, G. (2019). Enabling Fake Base Station Detection through Sample-based Higher Order Noise Statistics. In Norbert Herencsar (Eds.), 2019 42nd International Conference on Telecommunications and Signal Processing, TSP 2019 (pp. 695-700). Budapest, Hungary, HU: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc..

MLA:

Ali, Arslan, and Georg Fischer. "Enabling Fake Base Station Detection through Sample-based Higher Order Noise Statistics." Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Telecommunications and Signal Processing, TSP 2019, Budapest, Hungary Ed. Norbert Herencsar, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2019. 695-700.

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