MIDS: Detecting Stealthy Masquerade and Tampering Attacks on CAN Bus via Bidirectional Mamba
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 20:54 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A dual-stream bidirectional Mamba detects in-place masquerade attacks on CAN bus by jointly modeling ID and payload sequences.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
MIDS attains an F1 of 96.94 percent on a Tesla-collected dataset containing 54 masquerade variants and reaches F1 scores between 93.70 percent and 99.61 percent on four public benchmarks, exceeding the strongest reproducible baseline by up to 13.94 percentage points while sustaining inference latency low enough for real-time onboard use.
What carries the argument
Dual-stream bidirectional selective state-space model that processes CAN identifiers and payloads in parallel and reconstructs their joint temporal semantics.
If this is right
- Masquerade attacks that preserve traffic periodicity become detectable without inter-arrival statistics.
- A single architecture handles both masquerade and fabrication-style injection attacks across multiple datasets.
- Inference latency of roughly 1.1 ms leaves headroom for real-time deployment inside vehicles.
- Performance gains of 8 to 14 percentage points over prior methods hold under a unified 5-fold evaluation protocol.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If the approach generalizes, vehicle security systems could move from post-facto logging to continuous in-situ detection of internal substitutions.
- The dual-stream design may transfer to other in-vehicle buses that also lack authentication.
- Training exclusively on synthesized attacks leaves open the question of whether models must be fine-tuned on traces from actual compromised hardware.
Load-bearing premise
The 54 synthesized masquerade variants and the CAN traces gathered from one Tesla Model 3 across three driving regimes are representative of real-world stealthy attacks.
What would settle it
Running MIDS on CAN traffic recorded from a different vehicle model or on attacks produced by physically compromised ECUs and observing whether F1 falls below 90 percent would test the central claim.
Figures
read the original abstract
The Controller Area Network (CAN) protocol is the primary communication standard for Electronic Control Units (ECUs) in modern vehicles, but its lack of encryption and authentication exposes it to a range of security threats. Existing intrusion detection systems are largely tuned to fabrication-style attacks (DoS, fuzzing, ID spoofing realised by frame injection), in which detection signals such as per-ID inter-arrival statistics are readily available. We instead address the harder \emph{masquerade} setting~\cite{b37}, in which an internal adversary substitutes a legitimate frame in-situ at its original transmission slot, preserving traffic periodicity and rendering traffic-statistic defences ineffective. We propose the Mamba Intrusion Detection System (MIDS), an innovative dual-stream framework that processes CAN identifiers and payloads in parallel and reconstructs their joint temporal semantics through bidirectional selective state-space modelling. To evaluate MIDS, we collected over 100 million CAN frames from a physical Tesla Model 3 across three driving regimes and synthesised 54 masquerade attack variants spanning ID-only, data-only, and combined modifications. MIDS attains an F1 of 96.94\% on this dataset, exceeding the strongest reproducible baseline by more than 8 percentage points, while sustaining a 1.147~ms single-window inference latency -- ample headroom for real-time onboard deployment. To verify generalisation, we further evaluate MIDS on four public benchmarks (ROAD, CrySyS, OTIDS, CT\&T) covering both masquerade and injection scenarios; MIDS attains F1 from 93.70\% to 99.61\%, outperforming the strongest of eight reproduced baselines by up to 13.94 percentage points under a unified 5-fold protocol.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes MIDS, a dual-stream bidirectional Mamba framework for detecting masquerade and tampering attacks on CAN bus. It collects >100M frames from a physical Tesla Model 3 across three regimes, synthesizes 54 attack variants via post-hoc ID/payload substitution that preserves inter-arrival times, and reports F1=96.94% (exceeding the strongest baseline by >8pp) with 1.147ms inference latency. Generalization is tested on four public benchmarks (ROAD, CrySyS, OTIDS, CT&T) under 5-fold CV, yielding F1 93.70–99.61% and outperforming eight reproduced baselines by up to 13.94pp.
Significance. If the attack synthesis is representative, MIDS would advance detection of stealthy masquerade attacks that evade traffic-statistic methods by exploiting joint temporal semantics. Strengths include multi-benchmark evaluation, reproduction of eight baselines, and explicit latency measurements supporting real-time use. The work is empirically grounded but hinges on the validity of the synthesized data.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract] Abstract and attack-synthesis description: masquerade variants are generated by post-hoc substitution of ID or payload bytes while preserving nominal inter-arrival times. This procedure does not enforce the constraints a genuine internal attacker must satisfy—seizing the exact transmission slot of a live ECU and keeping the vehicle state machine consistent. Consequently the reported F1 gains may reflect synthesis artifacts rather than the bidirectional Mamba’s claimed exploitation of joint temporal semantics.
- [Methods / Evaluation] Model and evaluation sections: the manuscript supplies no details on the precise bidirectional Mamba architecture (state dimension, selective mechanism parameters, dual-stream fusion), training procedure (optimizer, loss, regularization, early stopping), hyper-parameter search, or statistical validation (confidence intervals, multiple random seeds). These omissions are load-bearing for the central claim of >8pp and up to 13.94pp improvements.
- [Evaluation on public benchmarks] Public-benchmark evaluation: the unified 5-fold protocol on ROAD, CrySyS, OTIDS and CT&T does not mitigate the generalization risk if those corpora were also constructed by comparable post-hoc substitution; the same synthesis-specific artifacts could be learned across all test sets.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Clarify whether the 1.147 ms latency figure is measured on the target embedded hardware or a desktop GPU, and whether it includes preprocessing.
- [Dataset construction] Provide the exact definition of the 54 attack variants (which IDs, which payload bytes, how many frames per variant) in a table or supplementary material.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive feedback highlighting concerns about attack synthesis realism, missing methodological details, and potential generalization issues across benchmarks. We address each point below with our responses and planned revisions.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract and attack-synthesis description: masquerade variants are generated by post-hoc substitution of ID or payload bytes while preserving nominal inter-arrival times. This procedure does not enforce the constraints a genuine internal attacker must satisfy—seizing the exact transmission slot of a live ECU and keeping the vehicle state machine consistent. Consequently the reported F1 gains may reflect synthesis artifacts rather than the bidirectional Mamba’s claimed exploitation of joint temporal semantics.
Authors: We agree this is a valid limitation of post-hoc synthesis, which is standard in CAN IDS literature but cannot fully replicate ECU state consistency. Our approach focuses on preserving inter-arrival times to emulate masquerade effects on the bus, and the performance margin over baselines (which use the same data) indicates the model exploits temporal semantics beyond artifacts. We will add an explicit limitations subsection discussing attack model assumptions and synthesis caveats. revision: partial
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Referee: [Methods / Evaluation] Model and evaluation sections: the manuscript supplies no details on the precise bidirectional Mamba architecture (state dimension, selective mechanism parameters, dual-stream fusion), training procedure (optimizer, loss, regularization, early stopping), hyper-parameter search, or statistical validation (confidence intervals, multiple random seeds). These omissions are load-bearing for the central claim of >8pp and up to 13.94pp improvements.
Authors: These omissions are indeed critical for reproducibility. The revised manuscript will include full architecture specifications (state dimension, selective parameters, fusion method), training details (optimizer, loss, regularization, early stopping), hyperparameter search procedure, and statistical validation with multiple seeds and confidence intervals to substantiate the reported gains. revision: yes
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Referee: [Evaluation on public benchmarks] Public-benchmark evaluation: the unified 5-fold protocol on ROAD, CrySyS, OTIDS and CT&T does not mitigate the generalization risk if those corpora were also constructed by comparable post-hoc substitution; the same synthesis-specific artifacts could be learned across all test sets.
Authors: We note that ROAD includes real attack traces from physical testbeds, while others vary in construction. The consistent outperformance across these datasets with different attack types supports broader generalization. We will expand the evaluation section to detail each benchmark's attack synthesis method and add discussion of potential shared artifacts as a limitation. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No circularity: empirical evaluation on external datasets and baselines
full rationale
The paper reports standard supervised ML results: a bidirectional Mamba model is trained on CAN traces (Tesla-collected plus synthesized attacks) and evaluated via F1 against eight reproduced baselines under 5-fold cross-validation on four public benchmarks. No equations, first-principles derivations, or parameter-fitting steps are presented that reduce to the target metric by construction. The masquerade-attack synthesis procedure is described as an input to the evaluation protocol rather than a fitted output renamed as a prediction. No self-citation chains are invoked to justify uniqueness or load-bearing premises. The central claims therefore remain independent empirical measurements.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
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