Wireless Surveillance of Two-Hop Communications
Ganggang Ma, Jie Xu, Lingjie Duan, Rui Zhang

TL;DR
This paper investigates adaptive wireless surveillance strategies for two-hop communications, proposing mode selection and power optimization to enhance eavesdropping success in security applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel adaptive eavesdropping framework for two-hop links, optimizing mode and power to improve interception performance.
Findings
Mode selection significantly boosts eavesdropping rate
Hybrid jamming effectively reduces communication rate
Joint optimization outperforms individual strategies
Abstract
Wireless surveillance is becoming increasingly important to protect the public security by legitimately eavesdropping suspicious wireless communications. This paper studies the wireless surveillance of a two-hop suspicious communication link by a half-duplex legitimate monitor. By exploring the suspicious link's two-hop nature, the monitor can adaptively choose among the following three eavesdropping modes to improve the eavesdropping performance: (I) \emph{passive eavesdropping} to intercept both hops to decode the message collectively, (II) \emph{proactive eavesdropping} via {\emph{noise jamming}} over the first hop, and (III) \emph{proactive eavesdropping} via {\emph{hybrid jamming}} over the second hop. In both proactive eavesdropping modes, the (noise/hybrid) jamming over one hop is for the purpose of reducing the end-to-end communication rate of the suspicious link and accordingly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWireless Communication Security Techniques · Full-Duplex Wireless Communications · Security in Wireless Sensor Networks
