Ryunosuke Kobayashi, Kazuki Nomoto, Yuna Tanaka, Go Tsuruoka (Waseda University), Tatsuya Mori (Waseda University/NICT/RIKEN)

—Object detection is a crucial function that detects the position and type of objects from data acquired by sensors. In autonomous driving systems, object detection is performed using data from cameras and LiDAR, and based on the results, the vehicle is controlled to follow the safest route. However, machine learning-based object detection has been reported to have vulnerabilities to adversarial samples. In this study, we propose a new attack method called “Shadow Hack” for LiDAR object detection models. While previous attack methods mainly added perturbed point clouds to LiDAR data, in this research, we introduce a method to generate “Adversarial Shadows” on the LiDAR point cloud. Specifically, the attacker strategically places materials like aluminum leisure mats to reproduce optimized positions and shapes of shadows on the LiDAR point cloud. This technique can potentially mislead LiDAR-based object detection in autonomous vehicles, leading to congestion and accidents due to actions such as braking and avoidance maneuvers. We reproduce the Shadow Hack attack method using simulations and evaluate the success rate of the attack. Furthermore, by revealing the conditions under which the attack succeeds, we aim to propose countermeasures and contribute to enhancing the robustness of autonomous driving systems.

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Acoustic Keystroke Leakage on Smart Televisions

Tejas Kannan (University of Chicago), Synthia Qia Wang (University of Chicago), Max Sunog (University of Chicago), Abraham Bueno de Mesquita (University of Chicago Laboratory Schools), Nick Feamster (University of Chicago), Henry Hoffmann (University of Chicago)

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On the Security of Satellite-Based Air Traffic Control

Tobias Lüscher (ETH Zurich), Martin Strohmeier (Cyber-Defence Campus, armasuisse S+T), Vincent Lenders (Cyber-Defence Campus, armasuisse S+T)

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Detection and Resolution of Control Decision Anomalies

Prof. Kang Shin (Kevin and Nancy O'Connor Professor of Computer Science, and the Founding Director of the Real-Time Computing Laboratory (RTCL) in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department at the University of Michigan)

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Automatic Policy Synthesis and Enforcement for Protecting Untrusted Deserialization

Quan Zhang (Tsinghua University), Yiwen Xu (Tsinghua University), Zijing Yin (Tsinghua University), Chijin Zhou (Tsinghua University), Yu Jiang (Tsinghua University)

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