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Scientific Article details

Title Securing Smart Cities with Monitors
ID_Doc 40092
Authors Creado, OM; Le, PD
Title Securing Smart Cities with Monitors
Year 2017
Published
DOI
Abstract Advances in technology, population increase, climate change, international business and sustainability, now mandate the need for smart cities to accommodate increasing demands. However, current implementations of smart cities lack the security architecture to interlace all the essential components such as effective development, monitoring, and administration. Currently, many computer-based systems pose a high security risk due to the lack of a secure architecture which integrates these various components, opening the possibility for lapses in communication which can be exploited by cyber-attacks, and can prove to be extremely costly from a disaster recovery perspective. With no concrete definitions available to define a smart city, it is paramount to define a highly secure operating architecture for computer-based system which can be integrated within smart city implementations capable of supporting essential components such as energy distribution, health support, transport management, etc. A system built with such an essential security architecture can be more effective in preventing attacks and thereby increasing the system's availability and reliability through secure operations. This paper proposes a conceptual architecture of monitors which can he applied to modern day smart cities to secure lower level operations. This novel application of the monitor concept would allow any implementation to be more practical and realizable for many computer-based systems currently being used in smart cities.
Author Keywords Smart city security; Security architecture; Computing system security
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science & Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
EID WOS:000443640503008
WoS Category Business; Management; Regional & Urban Planning
Research Area Business & Economics; Public Administration
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