U.S. flag   An unofficial archive of your favorite United States government website
Dot gov

Official websites do not use .rip
We are an unofficial archive, replace .rip by .gov in the URL to access the official website. Access our document index here.

Https

We are building a provable archive!
A lock (Dot gov) or https:// don't prove our archive is authentic, only that you securely accessed it. Note that we are working to fix that :)

NIST IR 8196 (Initial Public Draft)

Security Analysis of First Responder Mobile and Wearable Devices

Date Published: December 2018
Comments Due: February 6, 2019 (public comment period is CLOSED)
Email Questions to: nistir-8196-comments@nist.gov

Planning Note (12/18/2018): The comment closing date has been extended to February 6, 2019 (originally Jan. 7th).

Author(s)

Joshua Franklin (NIST), Gema Howell (NIST), Scott Ledgerwood (NIST), Jaydee Griffith (NTIA)

Announcement

With the upcoming public safety broadband networks (PSBNs), mobile and wearable devices will become ideal options for first responders (firefighters, law enforcement and EMS). These devices will provide many benefits to first responders, such as quality communication on a dedicated network and the ability to send vital information necessary to achieve success during an emergency incident. As an effort through the Public Safety Communications Research (PSCR) Division, Draft NISTIR 8196, Security Analysis of First Responder Mobile and Wearable Devices, reviews the current and potential use cases of these mobile and wearable devices by first responders and then analyzes these devices from a cybersecurity perspective. Ultimately, the goal of this analysis is to identify security objectives for mobile and wearable devices to assist jurisdictions with selecting secure devices and enable industry to design and produce securer public safety devices.

Abstract

Keywords

cybersecurity; first responders; internet of things; IoT; mobile security; public safety; wearables
Control Families

None selected

Topics

Security and Privacy

general security & privacy

Technologies

mobile, networks, sensors

Sectors

public safety