99.60 Withdrawal effective Oct 14, 2015
CEN
CEN/TC 278 Intelligent transport systems
Technical Specification
35.240.60 IT applications in transport
Withdrawn
1.1 EFC specific scope
ISO 17573 defines the roles and functions as well as the internal and external entities of the EFC system environment. Based on the system architecture defined in ISO 17573, the security framework describes a set of requirements and security measures for stakeholders to implement and operate their part of an EFC system as required for a trustworthy environment according to its basic information security policy. In general, the overall scope is an information security framework for all organisational and technical entities and in detail for the interfaces between them.
Figure 3 below illustrates the abstract EFC system model used to analyse the threats, define the security requirements and security measures of this Technical Specification. This Technical Specification is based on the assumption of an OBE which is dedicated to EFC purposes only and neither considers value added services based on EFC OBE, nor more generic OBE platforms (called in-vehicle ITS Stations) used to host the EFC application.
The scope of this security framework comprises the following:
- general information security objectives of the stakeholders;
- threat analysis;
- definition of a trust model;
- security requirements;
- security measures – countermeasures;
- security specifications for interface implementation;
- key management;
- security policies;
- privacy-enabled implementations.
The following is outside the scope of this Technical Specification:
- a complete risk assessment for an EFC system;
- security issues rising from an EFC application running on an ITS station;
NOTE Security issues associated with an EFC application running on an ITS station will be covered in a CEN Technical Report on "Guidelines for EFC-applications based on in vehicle ITS Stations" that is being developed at the time of publication of this document.
- entities and interfaces of the interoperability management role;
- the technical trust relation of the model between TSP and User;
- a complete specification and description of all necessary security measures to all identified threats;
- concrete implementation specifications for implementation of security for EFC system, e.g. European electronic toll service (EETS);
- detailed specifications required for privacy-friendly EFC implementations.
The detailed scope of the bullet points and the clause with the corresponding content is given below:
- General information security objectives of the stakeholders (informative, Annex C)
To derive actual security requirements and define implementations, it is crucial to gain a common understanding of the possible different perspectives and objectives of such stakeholders of a toll charging environment.
- Threat analysis (informative, Annex D)
The threat analysis is the basis and motivation for all the security requirements resulting in this framework. The results from two complementary approaches will be combined in one common set of requirements. The first approach considers a number of threat scenarios from the perspective of various attackers. The second approach looks in depth on threats against the various identified assets (tangible and intangible entities).
- Definition of a trust model (normative, Clause 5)
The trust model comprises all basic assumptions and principles for establishing trust between the stakeholders. The trust model forms the basis for the implementation of cryptographic procedures to ensure confidentiality, integrity, authenticity and partly non-repudiation of exchanged data.
- Security requirements (normative, Clause 6)
(...)
Legislation related to this standard
Directive 2004/54/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on minimum safety requirements for tunnels in the trans-European road network
WITHDRAWN
CEN/TS 16439:2013
99.60
Withdrawal effective
Oct 14, 2015
WITHDRAWN
CEN ISO/TS 19299:2015