The ETSI Technical Committee on Cybersecurity (TC CYBER) unveils ETSI EN 303 645, a standard for cyber security in the Internet of Things that establishes a security baseline for internet connected consumer products and provides a basis for future IoT certification schemes.
Based on the ETSI specification TS 103 645, EN 303 645 went through National Standards Organization comments and voting, engaging even more stakeholders in its development and ultimately strengthening the resulting standard. The EN is a result of collaboration and expertise from industry, academics and government.
Internet-connected consumer devices
By preventing these attacks, the EN represents a huge uplift in baseline security and privacy
As more devices in the home connect to the internet, the cyber security of the Internet of Things (IoT) has become a growing concern. The EN is designed to prevent large-scale, prevalent attacks against smart devices that cyber security experts see every day. Compliance with the standard will restrict the ability of attackers to control devices across the globe - known as botnets - to launch DDoS attacks, mine cryptocurrency and spy on users in their own homes.
By preventing these attacks, the EN represents a huge uplift in baseline security and privacy. ETSI EN 303 645 specifies 13 provisions for the security of Internet-connected consumer devices and their associated services.
Connected home automation
IoT products in scope include connected children’s toys and baby monitors, connected safety relevant products such as smoke detectors and door locks, smart cameras, TVs and speakers, wearable health trackers, connected home automation and alarm systems, connected appliances (e.g. washing machines, fridges) and smart home assistants. The EN also includes 5 specific data protection provisions for consumer IoT.
“We launched the Finnish IoT label in November 2019; it was a world first and it attracted a lot of global interest,” says Juhani Eronen from Traficom. “Our labels are awarded to networking smart devices that meet certification criteria based on EN 303 645; this help consumers identify IoT devices that are sufficiently secure."
Common security weaknesses
It focuses on the product baseline controls addressing the most common security weaknesses in the IoT ecosystem"
"To date we have awarded the labels to several products including fitness watches, home automation devices and smart hubs. Being involved in the development of the ETSI standard from the start helped us a lot in building up our certification scheme. Feedback from companies and hackers has been very positive so far,” he adds.
“Legrand is pleased to have contributed to the ETSI EN 303 645 standard. It focuses on the product baseline controls addressing the most common security weaknesses in the IoT ecosystem. Ensuring a better level of security in the IoT Ecosystem can only be achieved if Governments, Industry and Consumers collaborate on a common and reachable goal, and standardisation bodies like ETSI have provided the right platform to achieve it for this standard,” says Mahmoud Ghaddar, CISO Standardisation.
Maintaining efficient security
ETSI EN 303 645 is a cohesive standard that presents an achievable, single target for manufacturers and IoT stakeholders to attain. Many organisations have already based their products and certification schemes around the EN and its predecessor TS. It demonstrates how one standard can underpin many assurance schemes and provide flexibility in certification - whilst maintaining efficient security.
The ETSI Technical Committee CYBER (TC CYBER) continues its work on IoT security, with the development of a test specification and an implementation guide to complement EN 303 645.