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arxiv: 2606.21016 · v1 · pith:VZPYK2A3new · submitted 2026-06-19 · 💻 cs.CR

Quantifying the Impact of Stealthy BLE Spam & Flooding Attacks on IoT Environments

Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 14:20 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 💻 cs.CR
keywords BLE floodingIoT securitydenial of serviceagility strategyBLE spamresource exhaustionmedical IoT
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The pith

BLE flooding attacks on IoT can be quantified and deterred by agility that raises attacker costs.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes a quantitative basis for measuring how BLE spam and flooding attacks exhaust device resources in IoT settings such as medical sensors. It highlights the vulnerability in energy-efficient protocols used in contested environments like battlefield medical systems. The work introduces an agility-based strategy as a practical way to increase the effort required for such attacks. A reader would care because these attacks threaten communication in critical systems where static facilities are vulnerable. If the claims hold, defenders gain tools to assess and mitigate risks in dense wireless ecosystems.

Core claim

In this work, we develop a quantitative foundation for understanding the impact of such attacks and propose a practical deterrence strategy based on agility to raise the cost of such attacks.

What carries the argument

Agility-based deterrence strategy that increases the cost for adversaries flooding BLE advertisement channels with unauthorized requests.

Load-bearing premise

That an agility-based approach can practically raise the cost of BLE flooding attacks without further implementation details.

What would settle it

A measurement of attacker resource use in a test IoT setup with and without the agility measure, showing no measurable increase in effort or reduction in attack success.

read the original abstract

The energy-efficient design of the BLE protocol, emphasis on rapid, and userfriendly discovery, making it an ideal choice for IoMTs, specifically, military field medical systems, and battlefield wearable sensors. Especially in active conflict zones, when static medical facilities are vulnerable and often targeted, limiting their viability for sustained care delivery. This rapid deployment, and ease of management comes at the cost of expanded attack surface, i.e., BLE flooding attacks. During such attacks, adversaries flood advertisement channels with unauthorized connection or advertising requests to exhaust nearby device resources and disrupt legitimate communication, sometimes culminating in denial-of-service conditions. A first public proof-of-concept of such attacks, using a Raspberry Pi has since been adapted to commodity platforms (e.g., Flipper Zero, HackRF, Android), lowering the barrier to attack. In contested environments, such platforms are directly relevant to adversarial RF jamming and spoofing operations, where low-cost, portable devices can induce disproportionate disruption in dense wireless ecosystems. In this work, we develop a quantitative foundation for understanding the impact of such attacks and propose a practical deterrence strategy based on agility to raise the cost of such attacks.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript claims to develop a quantitative foundation for understanding the impact of stealthy BLE spam and flooding attacks on IoT environments (with emphasis on IoMTs, military field medical systems, and battlefield sensors) and to propose a practical agility-based deterrence strategy that raises the cost of such attacks. It notes BLE's energy-efficient design and rapid discovery as expanding the attack surface, the availability of low-cost attack platforms (Raspberry Pi, Flipper Zero, HackRF, Android), and relevance to RF jamming/spoofing in contested environments.

Significance. If substantiated with data and validation, the work could inform security practices for BLE in high-stakes wireless ecosystems where low-cost attacks can cause disproportionate disruption. The focus on contested environments and commodity attack tools highlights practical relevance. However, the provided text supplies no supporting analysis, models, or evidence, limiting any assessment of significance.

major comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The central claim that the work 'develop[s] a quantitative foundation for understanding the impact of such attacks and propose[s] a practical deterrence strategy based on agility' is unsupported; the text contains no methods, equations, experimental setup, metrics (e.g., energy drain, connection success rates, channel-switching intervals), results, or validation of the agility approach. This is load-bearing for the paper's stated contribution.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: Awkward phrasing and grammatical issues reduce clarity, e.g., 'The energy-efficient design of the BLE protocol, emphasis on rapid, and userfriendly discovery, making it an ideal choice for IoMTs, specifically, military field medical systems, and battlefield wearable sensors.'

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the detailed review and the recommendation. We acknowledge that the provided manuscript text consists primarily of the abstract and does not include the supporting methods, experiments, metrics, or results referenced in the central claim.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The central claim that the work 'develop[s] a quantitative foundation for understanding the impact of such attacks and propose[s] a practical deterrence strategy based on agility' is unsupported; the text contains no methods, equations, experimental setup, metrics (e.g., energy drain, connection success rates, channel-switching intervals), results, or validation of the agility approach. This is load-bearing for the paper's stated contribution.

    Authors: We agree that the claim in the abstract is currently unsupported by the text provided in the manuscript. The manuscript as presented does not contain the methods, equations, experimental setup, metrics, results, or validation. We will revise the manuscript to add these elements, including descriptions of the experimental platforms, quantitative metrics for attack impact, and evaluation of the agility deterrence strategy. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No equations, parameters, or derivation chain present in the manuscript

full rationale

The provided abstract and manuscript text contain no equations, fitted parameters, self-citations of uniqueness theorems, or any load-bearing derivations. The central claims are stated as proposals for future quantitative work and an agility strategy, but no mathematical steps, inputs, or reductions exist that could be checked for circularity. This is the expected non-finding when a paper supplies no formal chain to inspect.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

The abstract does not mention any free parameters, axioms, or invented entities.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5736 in / 969 out tokens · 28082 ms · 2026-06-26T14:20:00.136059+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

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