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Aerospace Village - Cybersecurity meets Aviation Regulation

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Aerospace Village - Cybersecurity meets Aviation Regulation
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374
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CC Attribution 3.0 Unported:
You are free to use, adapt and copy, distribute and transmit the work or content in adapted or unchanged form for any legal purpose as long as the work is attributed to the author in the manner specified by the author or licensor.
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Software development for aviation is highly regulated, and process driven. The current processes, as defined in DO-178C and related standards, originate from a history of designing and testing mechanical components. In the past you designed a part and once installed it only had to be monitored for physical condition. It was assumed that maintenance procedures would be able to identify which components are in flight condition and which are not. But now that there are USB ports and iPads in the cockpit, do these previous assumptions remain valid? How can we ensure that flight systems are not compromised after being installed? What can be done to help ensure aviation systems are secure? There are 4 primary areas of concern on a modern aircraft: Maintenance interfaces - What is necessary to ensure that software communicating with the aircraft is correct and operates in a secure manner? Passenger interfaces - What is necessary to ensure that systems passengers interact with cannot interfere with the aircraft operation? Crew accessible interfaces - What is necessary to ensure that the crew cannot accidentally connect a malicious device to flight systems? Pre-flight software validation - Is there a procedure that could be used to ensure that the software running on aircraft systems is 100% correct and unmodified?