A Dynamic SDN-based Privacy-Preserving Approach for Smart City Using Trust Technique

Abstract
A smart city is an Internet-based application of things that automates city management with no need for human interference. Exchanging data via devices obviate some challenges in intelligent cities. In a smart city, Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices may detect sensitive data, posing a risk of privacy violation and system harm. We discover that existing solutions are either too expensive or ineffective at limiting unintended disclosure of sensitive data to build a dependable, smart city. The fact that they create static surroundings is the fundamental reason behind this. Software-Defined Networking (SDN) technology has recently evolved to configure the network for performance and monitoring improvement. This study offers a work-in-progress that uses the SDN to protect the privacy of IoT devices by creating a dynamic SDN-based privacy-preserving ecology. The mechanism of the SDN controller performs under the nodes' mutual trust; it chooses various routes from the IoT device to the Cloud space destination dependent on the level of confidence. The packet is re-routed if the SDN controller identifies a device that does not trust its neighbor. Then it instructs the owner to deliver data over a different path. To demonstrate its improved performance, we are currently evaluating it from the perspective of overhead criteria in the future.

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