Shiqi Liu (George Mason University), Kun Sun (George Mason University)

Satellite vulnerabilities change over time as orbits shift, power margins tighten, and the space environment deteriorates. However, most cybersecurity risk frameworks still treat threats as static. In practice, the same exploit can be far more damaging during a critical maneuver than during routine operations. We propose a temporal risk assessment framework that makes time an explicit axis in satellite security analysis. It extends existing adversary behavior taxonomies with a fivedimensional temporal capability model and estimates exploitation difficulty across distinct temporal windows of a mission. Rather than producing a single risk score, the framework outputs a series of time-indexed likelihood–impact matrices. It discretizes missions into operationally meaningful time windows and environmental bands to show when systems are most exposed. This view helps operators avoid scheduling sensitive operations in high-risk periods and align defensive resources with a threat landscape that shifts over time.

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Tickets to Hide: An Inside Look into the Anti-Abuse...

Hugo Bijmans (Delft University of Technology), Michel Van Eeten (Delft University of Technology), Rolf van Wegberg (Delft University of Technology)

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Small Cell, Big Risk: A Security Assessment of 4G...

Yaru Yang (Tsinghua University), Yiming Zhang (Tsinghua University), Tao Wan (CableLabs & Carleton University), Haixin Duan (Tsinghua University & Quancheng Laboratory), Deliang Chang (QI-ANXIN Technology Research Institute), Yishen Li (Tsinghua University), Shujun Tang (Tsinghua University & QI-ANXIN Technology Research Institute)

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ACTS: Attestations of Contents in TLS Sessions

Pierpaolo Della Monica (Sapienza University of Rome), Ivan Visconti (Sapienza University of Rome), Andrea Vitaletti (Sapienza University of Rome), Marco Zecchini (Sapienza University of Rome)

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