A Formal Analysis of 5G Authentication
David A. Basin, Jannik Dreier, Lucca Hirschi, Sasa Radomirovic, Ralf Sasse, and Vincent Stettler. A Formal Analysis of 5G Authentication. In 25th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS'18), pp. 1383–1396, ACM, 2018.
doi:10.1145/3243734.3243846
Download
Abstract
Mobile communication networks connect much of the world's population. The security of users' calls, SMSs, and mobile data depends on the guarantees provided by the Authenticated Key Exchange protocols used. For the next-generation network (5G), the 3GPP group has standardized the 5G AKA protocol for this purpose. We provide the first comprehensive formal model of a protocol from the AKA family: 5G AKA. We also extract precise requirements from the 3GPP standards defining 5G and we identify missing security goals. Using the security protocol verification tool Tamarin, we conduct a full, systematic, security evaluation of the model with respect to the 5G security goals. Our automated analysis identifies the minimal security assumptions required for each security goal and we find that some critical security goals are not met, except under additional assumptions missing from the standard. Finally, we make explicit recommendations with provably secure fixes for the attacks and weaknesses we found.
BibTeX
@InProceedings{PrivVerif-CCS18,
author = {David A. Basin and Jannik Dreier and Lucca Hirschi
and Sasa Radomirovic and Ralf Sasse and Vincent
Stettler},
abstract = {Mobile communication networks connect much of the
world's population. The security of users' calls,
SMSs, and mobile data depends on the guarantees
provided by the Authenticated Key Exchange protocols
used. For the next-generation network (5G), the 3GPP
group has standardized the 5G AKA protocol for this
purpose. We provide the first comprehensive formal
model of a protocol from the AKA family: 5G AKA. We
also extract precise requirements from the 3GPP
standards defining 5G and we identify missing
security goals. Using the security protocol
verification tool Tamarin, we conduct a full,
systematic, security evaluation of the model with
respect to the 5G security goals. Our automated
analysis identifies the minimal security assumptions
required for each security goal and we find that
some critical security goals are not met, except
under additional assumptions missing from the
standard. Finally, we make explicit recommendations
with provably secure fixes for the attacks and
weaknesses we found.},
title = {A Formal Analysis of 5G Authentication},
booktitle = {25th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications
Security (CCS'18)},
year = 2018,
pages = {1383--1396},
publisher = {ACM},
doi = {10.1145/3243734.3243846},
={https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01898050/file/CCS18_finalcrc2_Fixed-Typo.pdf},
}