Abstract
Robotics is becoming more and more ubiquitous, but the pressure to bring systems to market occasionally goes at the cost of neglecting security mechanisms during the development, deployment or while in production. As a result, contemporary robotic systems are vulnerable to diverse attack patterns, and an a posteriori hardening is at least challenging, if not impossible at all. This work aims to stipulate the inclusion of security in robotics from the earliest design phases onward and with a special focus on the cost-bene?t tradeoff? that can otherwise be an inhibitor for the fast development of aff?ordable systems. We advocate quantitative methods of security management and -design, covering vulnerability scoring systems tailored to robotic systems, and accounting for the highly distributed nature of robots as an interplay of potentially very many components. A powerful quantitative approach to model-based security is off?ered by game theory, providing a rich spectrum of techniques to optimize security against various kinds of attacks. Such a multiperspective view on security is necessary to address the heterogeneity and complexity of robotic systems. This book is intended as an accessible starter for the theoretician and practitioner working in the ?eld.
Abstract (translated)
URL
https://arxiv.org/abs/2103.05789