Date Published: September 2020
Comments Due:
Email Questions to:
Author(s)
Donna Dodson (NIST), Douglas Montgomery (NIST), W. Polk (NIST), Mudumbai Ranganathan (NIST), Murugiah Souppaya (NIST), Steve Johnson (CableLabs), Ashwini Kadam (CableLabs), Craig Pratt (CableLabs), Darshak Thakore (CableLabs), Mark Walker (CableLabs), Eliot Lear (Cisco), Brian Weis (Cisco), William Barker (Dakota Consulting), Dean Coclin (DigiCert), Avesta Hojjati (DigiCert), Clint Wilson (DigiCert), Tim Jones (ForeScout), Adnan Baykal (Global Cyber Alliance), Drew Cohen (MasterPeace Solutions), Kevin Yeich (MasterPeace Solutions), Yemi Fashina (MITRE), Parisa Grayeli (MITRE), Joshua Harrington (MITRE), Joshua Klosterman (MITRE), Blaine Mulugeta (MITRE), Susan Symington (MITRE), Jaideep Singh (Molex)
Announcement
The National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NCCoE) has released the final public draft of the NIST Cybersecurity Practice Guide, SP 1800-15, “Securing Small-Business and Home Internet of Things (IoT) Devices: Mitigating Network-Based Attacks Using Manufacturer Usage Description (MUD),” and is seeking the public's comments on the contents. This practice guide is intended to show IoT device developers and manufacturers, network equipment developers and manufacturers, and service providers who employ MUD-capable components how to integrate and use MUD and other tools to satisfy IoT users’ security requirements.
NOTE: A call for patent claims is included on page iii of 1800-15B. For additional information, see the Information Technology Laboratory (ITL) Patent Policy--Inclusion of Patents in ITL Publications.
The goal of the Internet Engineering Task Force’s Manufacturer Usage Description (MUD) specification is for Internet of Things (IoT) devices to behave as intended by the manufacturers of the devices. MUD provides a standard way for manufacturers to indicate the network communications that a device requires to perform its intended function. When MUD is used, the network will automatically permit the IoT device to send and receive only the traffic it requires to perform as intended, and the network will prohibit all other communication with the device, thereby increasing the device’s resilience to network based attacks. In this project, the NCCoE demonstrated the ability to ensure that when an IoT device connects to a home or small-business network, MUD can automatically permit the device to send and receive only the traffic it requires to perform its intended function. This NIST Cybersecurity Practice Guide explains how MUD protocols and tools can reduce the vulnerability of IoT devices to botnets and other network-based threats as well as reduce the potential for harm from exploited IoT devices. It also shows IoT device developers and manufacturers, network equipment developers and manufacturers, and service providers who employ MUD-capable components how to integrate and use MUD to satisfy IoT users’ security requirements.
The goal of the Internet Engineering Task Force’s Manufacturer Usage Description (MUD) specification is for Internet of Things (IoT) devices to behave as intended by the manufacturers of the devices. MUD provides a standard way for manufacturers to indicate the network communications that a...
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The goal of the Internet Engineering Task Force’s Manufacturer Usage Description (MUD) specification is for Internet of Things (IoT) devices to behave as intended by the manufacturers of the devices. MUD provides a standard way for manufacturers to indicate the network communications that a device requires to perform its intended function. When MUD is used, the network will automatically permit the IoT device to send and receive only the traffic it requires to perform as intended, and the network will prohibit all other communication with the device, thereby increasing the device’s resilience to network based attacks. In this project, the NCCoE demonstrated the ability to ensure that when an IoT device connects to a home or small-business network, MUD can automatically permit the device to send and receive only the traffic it requires to perform its intended function. This NIST Cybersecurity Practice Guide explains how MUD protocols and tools can reduce the vulnerability of IoT devices to botnets and other network-based threats as well as reduce the potential for harm from exploited IoT devices. It also shows IoT device developers and manufacturers, network equipment developers and manufacturers, and service providers who employ MUD-capable components how to integrate and use MUD to satisfy IoT users’ security requirements.
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Keywords
access control; bootstrapping; botnets; firewall rules; flow rules; Internet of Things; IoT; Manufacturer Usage Description; MUD; network segmentation; onboarding; router; server; software update server; threat signaling; Wi-Fi Easy Connect
Control Families
Access Control; System and Communications Protection