Security fest 2026 - Academic village

Atmane Ayoub Mansour Bahar (@man)

Atmane Ayoub Mansour Bahar is a Ph.D. student in Network Security at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden. Holding an Engineering degree and an M.Sc. in Computer Systems, his research focuses on 5G network security, passive network attacks, and AI applications in cybersecurity. He is affiliated with the Chalmers Security & Privacy Lab.


Session

05-27
15:45
10min
How Feasible are Passive Network Attacks on 5G Networks and Beyond? A Survey
Atmane Ayoub Mansour Bahar (@man)

Privacy concerns around 5G, the latest generation of mobile networks, are growing, with fears that its deployment may increase exposure to privacy risks. This perception is largely driven by the use of denser deployments of small antenna systems, which enable highly accurate data collection at higher speeds and closer proximity to mobile users. At the same time, 5G's unique radio communication features can make the reproduction of known network attacks more challenging. In particular, passive network attacks, which do not involve direct interaction with the target network and are therefore nearly impossible to detect, remain a pressing concern. Such attacks can reveal sensitive information about users, their devices, and active applications, which may then be exploited through known vulnerabilities or spear-phishing schemes. This survey examines the feasibility of passive network attacks in 5G and beyond (B5G/6G) networks, with emphasis on two major categories: information extraction (system identification, website and application fingerprinting) and geolocation (user identification and position tracking). These attacks are well documented and reproducible in existing wireless and mobile systems, including short-range networks (IEEE 802.11) and, to a lesser extent, LTE. Current evidence suggests that while such attacks remain theoretically possible in 5G, their practical execution is significantly constrained by directional beamforming, high-frequency propagation characteristics, and encryption mechanisms. For B5G and early 6G networks, the lack of public tools and high hardware cost currently renders these attacks infeasible in practice, which highlights a critical gap in our understanding of future network threat models.

Taube Room