Diego Ortiz, Leilani Gilpin, Alvaro A. Cardenas (University of California, Santa Cruz)

Autonomous vehicles must operate in a complex environment with various social norms and expectations. While most of the work on securing autonomous vehicles has focused on safety, we argue that we also need to monitor for deviations from various societal “common sense” rules to identify attacks against autonomous systems. In this paper, we provide a first approach to encoding and understanding these common-sense driving behaviors by semi-automatically extracting rules from driving manuals. We encode our driving rules in a formal specification and make our rules available online for other researchers.

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Post-GDPR Threat Hunting on Android Phones: Dissecting OS-level Safeguards...

Mark Huasong Meng (National University of Singapore), Qing Zhang (ByteDance), Guangshuai Xia (ByteDance), Yuwei Zheng (ByteDance), Yanjun Zhang (The University of Queensland), Guangdong Bai (The University of Queensland), Zhi Liu (ByteDance), Sin G. Teo (Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Jin Song Dong (National University of Singapore)

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WIP: Adversarial Retroreflective Patches: A Novel Stealthy Attack on...

Go Tsuruoka (Waseda University), Takami Sato, Qi Alfred Chen (University of California, Irvine), Kazuki Nomoto, Ryunosuke Kobayashi, Yuna Tanaka (Waseda University), Tatsuya Mori (Waseda University/NICT/RIKEN)

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