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Lesson 7.5: The IoT Ecosystem (Devices, Protocols & Security)

Module: 7 – Cybersecurity for Physical Security

Prerequisites: Lesson 7.3 (Network Architecture)

Estimated Time: 45–60 Minutes


1. Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  • Differentiate between High-Bandwidth IoT (Cameras) and Low-Power IoT (Sensors).
  • Compare lightweight protocols like MQTT and CoAP against traditional HTTP.
  • Select the correct wireless standard (Zigbee, Z-Wave, or LoRaWAN) based on range and battery life.
  • Identify “Shadow IoT” on a network and mitigate the risk of unmanaged devices.

2. What is IoT? (Sensors vs. Actuators)

The “Internet of Things” is just a fancy term for devices that are not computers but are connected to the network.

The Two Types:

  1. Sensors (Input): They gather data.
    • Examples: Temperature probes, Air Quality sensors, Vibration detectors, Door contacts.
    • Traffic: Very low (sending a few bytes every hour).
  2. Actuators (Output): They do something physically.
    • Examples: Smart light bulbs, Smart locks, HVAC dampers, Water valves.
    • Traffic: Bursty (waiting for a command).

The Integrator’s Challenge:

IT departments are used to “High Power” devices (Laptops, Servers). They often don’t understand how to manage a battery-powered sensor that sleeps for 23 hours a day.


3. The Language of IoT: MQTT vs. HTTP

Why don’t smart bulbs use the same web language (HTTP) as your browser? Because HTTP is “heavy.”

HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol)

  • The method: “Request/Response.” The client asks, the server answers.
  • The flaw: It requires a lot of overhead (headers, handshakes). Sending “Temp=70” might take 500 bytes of data. That kills the battery of a small sensor.

MQTT (Message Queuing Telemetry Transport)

  • The method: “Publish/Subscribe.”
    • The Sensor (Publisher) wakes up, yells “Temp=70” to a central Broker, and goes back to sleep.
    • The App (Subscriber) is listening to the Broker.
  • The benefit: Ultra-lightweight. The same message might only take 50 bytes.
  • Use Case: The Standard for IoT. Used by almost all smart home and industrial sensors.

4. Wireless Standards: Zigbee, Z-Wave, LoRaWAN

Wi-Fi is terrible for small sensors because it uses too much power (battery dies in a week). We use dedicated IoT mesh networks instead.

ProtocolFrequencyRangeTop FeatureUse Case
Zigbee2.4 GHzShort (~10-20m)Mesh Networking. Devices hop signals to reach the hub.Smart Office lighting, Amazon Echo devices.
Z-Wave908 MHzMedium (~30m)Interoperability. Strict standard; all Z-Wave devices work together.Smart Home locks and sensors.
LoRaWAN900 MHzLong (Miles)Low Power, Long Range. Can reach 10km on a coin battery.Smart Cities, Parking sensors, Agriculture (Farms).
Wi-Fi2.4 / 5 GHzMediumHigh Bandwidth.Video Doorbells, Cameras.

5. IoT Security: The “Shadow IoT” Risk

Definition: “Shadow IoT” refers to devices employees bring to work and connect to the Wi-Fi without IT knowing.

The Nightmare Scenario:

  1. An employee brings a cheap “Smart Aquarium Feeder” to their desk because they are going on vacation.
  2. They connect it to the corporate Wi-Fi using the password written on the whiteboard.
  3. The Feeder has zero security and a hard-coded password.
  4. The Breach: A hacker scans the network, finds the Feeder, compromises it, and uses it as a “Jump Box” to attack the Payroll Server.

The Fix:

  1. Network Access Control (NAC): As learned in Lesson 7.2 (802.1X). If the device doesn’t have a certificate, it doesn’t get on the main network.
  2. Guest IoT VLAN: Create a “Dirty” VLAN just for Alexa, Smart Fridges, and Fish Feeders. Isolate it completely from the business data.