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Automotive Cybersecurity Engineering Handbook

You're reading from   Automotive Cybersecurity Engineering Handbook The automotive engineer's roadmap to cyber-resilient vehicles

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801076531
Length 392 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser
Author Profile Icon Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser
Dr. Ahmad MK Nasser
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Understanding the Cybersecurity Relevance of the Vehicle Electrical Architecture
2. Chapter 1: Introducing the Vehicle Electrical/Electronic Architecture FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Cybersecurity Basics for Automotive Use Cases 4. Chapter 3: Threat Landscape against Vehicle Components 5. Part 2: Understanding the Secure Engineering Development Process
6. Chapter 4: Exploring the Landscape of Automotive Cybersecurity Standards 7. Chapter 5: Taking a Deep Dive into ISO/SAE21434 8. Chapter 6: Interactions Between Functional Safety and Cybersecurity 9. Part 3: Executing the Process to Engineer a Secure Automotive Product
10. Chapter 7: A Practical Threat Modeling Approach for Automotive Systems 11. Chapter 8: Vehicle-Level Security Controls 12. Chapter 9: ECU-Level Security Controls 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Host-based intrusion detection

Even with state-of-the-art security controls, the OEM has no visibility of how effective those controls are during normal operation. Indeed, some controls may start out being quite effective yet diminish in strength over time as attackers’ abilities and tools increase in sophistication. Therefore, a security strategy that relies only on preventive security controls is incomplete unless complemented by attack detection mechanisms. Building anomaly detection systems in the vehicle accompanied by a backend security operation center (SOC) enables an OEM to bridge that gap and gain real-time perspective about the level of threats that the entire vehicle fleet is experiencing. This further enables the OEM to react promptly after an incident is detected when patching vulnerabilities is needed. With the distributed E/E architecture, no single ECU can know about all security events in the vehicle, so the host-based intrusion detection system (IDS) itself...

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