Electronics (Switzerland), cilt.15, sa.6, 2026 (SCI-Expanded, Scopus)
Radio Frequency Fingerprinting (RFF) would be a promising Physical Layer Security (PLS) solution for the Internet of Things (IoT) that requires robust, low-overhead security techniques. However, practical implementation of RFF may pose challenges, in particular, performance instability and ethical-regulatory conflicts. Based on authors’ previous research, this paper elaborates these challenges in potential deployment of a resilient and compliant RFF system. First, we analytically show how hardware-induced feature drift, primarily driven by device aging and temperature variations, degrades RFF performance. We then critically survey existing temperature variation and aging models, one of which is being studied by one of the authors’ research team. We look into this from a purely hardware-design perspective, and then compensation methods for an RFF perspective. This reveals a significant gap: current techniques are insufficient to maintain the long-term, high-accuracy RFF for real-world IoT security requirements. Finally, we introduce inherent privacy risks by enabling device tracking. This property conflicts with General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) mandates, raising significant regulatory challenges and privacy risks. Overall, this work highlights the key technical and legal challenges that must be addressed for RFF to evolve into a robust, privacy-compliant and deployable security primitive for IoT and future wireless systems.