SCIBE
Testing the security of communication protocols of physical and wireless interfaces
SCIBE (Secure communication interface bench) is a bench for testing the security compliance and vulnerability detection in communication interfaces for connected objects.
It conducts protocol security tests for wireless devices (Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, ZigBee) and physical interfaces (I2C, SPI, UART, JTAG, CAN).
It relies on a library of attacks published by field experts for testing campaigns. It also features an expert mode for more advanced scenarios such as sniffing, spying, spoofing, cloning, injecting, or jamming.
What's new?
SCIBE includes both a simple mode based on multiple test scenarios, and an advanced mode for experts. Materially, it includes a single computer which drives several access heads to test the security of several protocols. The simple, ergonomic user graphic interface makes it easy to use by all operator profiles.
SCIBE offers extensive tests for devices in master or slave mode for the Bluetooth interface, the most common one on the market. These tests are especially geared for advanced attacks such as identity theft and data manipulation.
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What's next?
CEA-Leti researchers are developing new features: - LoRaWAN and NFC protocols, with associated safety tests
- RF fuzzing techniques: protocol stack and application layer
- Relay attack tool
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