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When a patient with hearing aids needs to partake in audiometry procedures they need to visit a specialist which costs both time and money. Ideally, the patient should be able to conduct these tests alone, during their own time, and without additional costs. With this idea comes the question of if whether this is possible or not, and, if it is, how.
This thesis explores the throughput of Bluetooth Low Energy and if it is configurable to have a high enough data rate to send high quality audio data with a lossless audio codec while communicating with a low end device. Additionally, this thesis will show that using Rust to develop embedded software is possible and how using it can make the process of doing so easier.
In this work we describe the implementation details of a protocol suite for a secure and reliable over-the-air reprogramming of wireless restricted devices. Although, recently forward error correction codes aiming at a robust transmission over a noisy wireless medium have extensively been discussed and evaluated, we believe that the clear value of the contribution at hand is to share our experience when it comes to a meaningful combination and implementation of various multihop (broadcast) transmission protocols and custom-fit security building blocks: For a robust and reliable data transmission we make use of fountain codes a.k.a. rateless erasure codes and show how to combine such schemes with an underlying medium access control protocol, namely a distributed low duty cycle medium access control (DLDC-MAC). To handle the well known problem of packet pollution of forward-error-correction approaches where an attacker bogusly modifies or infiltrates some minor number of encoded packets and thus pollutes the whole data stream at the receiver side, we apply homomorphic message authentication codes (HomMAC). We discuss implementation details and the pros and cons of the two currently available HomMAC candidates for our setting. Both require as the core cryptographic primitive a symmetric block cipher for which, as we will argue later, we have opted for the PRESENT, PRIDE and PRINCE (exchangeable) ciphers in our implementation.