@inproceedings{sorber:pnt-poster, author = {Jacob Sorber and Minho Shin and Ron Peterson and David Kotz}, title = {Poster: Practical Trusted Computing for {mHealth} Sensing}, booktitle = {International Conference on Mobile Systems, Applications, and Services (MobiSys)}, year = {2011}, month = {June}, publisher = {ACM Press}, copyright = {ACM}, doi = {10.1145/1999995.2000058}, url = {http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~dfk/papers/sorber-pnt-poster.pdf}, abstract = {Mobile sensing technologies present exciting opportunities for healthcare. Wireless sensors can automatically provide sensor data to care providers, dramatically improving their ability to diagnose, monitor, and manage a wide range of medical conditions. Using mobile phones to provide connectivity between sensors and providers is essential to keeping costs low and deployments simple. Unfortunately, software-based attacks against phones, which can have significant consequences for patients, are also on the rise. \par This poster describes a simple, flexible, and novel approach to protecting both the confidentiality and integrity medical sensing and data processing on vulnerable mobile phones, using plug-in smart cards---even a phone compromised by malware. We describe our design, implementation, and initial experimental results using real smart cards and Android smartphones.} }