Simultaneously Exposing and Jamming Covert Communications via Disco Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces
Huan Huang, Hongliang Zhang, Yi Cai, Dusit Niyato, A. Lee Swindlehurst, Zhu Han

TL;DR
This paper explores how a disco RIS can simultaneously jam and expose covert communications by introducing time-varying jamming, challenging the assumption of channel reciprocity and affecting detection and communication performance.
Contribution
It introduces a novel use of disco RIS as a passive jammer that also reveals covert communication presence, with theoretical analysis and validation.
Findings
Disco RIS causes time-varying jamming that affects detection accuracy.
Theoretical detection thresholds and error probabilities are derived.
Numerical results confirm the impact of disco RIS on covert communication performance.
Abstract
Covert communications provide a stronger privacy protection than cryptography and physical-layer security (PLS). However, previous works on covert communications have implicitly assumed the validity of channel reciprocity, i.e., wireless channels remain constant or approximately constant during their coherence time. In this work, we investigate covert communications in the presence of a disco RIS (DRIS) deployed by the warden Willie, where the DRIS with random and time-varying reflective coefficients acts as a "disco ball", introducing timevarying fully-passive jamming (FPJ). Consequently, the channel reciprocity assumption no longer holds. The DRIS not only jams the covert transmissions between Alice and Bob, but also decreases the error probabilities of Willie's detections, without either Bob's channel knowledge or additional jamming power. To quantify the impact of the DRIS on covert…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWireless Communication Security Techniques · Security in Wireless Sensor Networks · Physical Unclonable Functions (PUFs) and Hardware Security
