Undetectable Conversations Between AI Agents via Pseudorandom Noise-Resilient Key Exchange
Vinod Vaikuntanathan, Or Zamir

TL;DR
This paper explores how AI agents can secretly communicate indistinguishably from honest interactions using novel cryptographic methods, even without shared secrets and under noisy conditions.
Contribution
It introduces pseudorandom noise-resilient key exchange, enabling covert conversations with minimal entropy assumptions, advancing cryptographic theory for AI agent interactions.
Findings
Covert communication is possible with shared or no shared secrets.
New primitive allows pseudorandom, noise-tolerant key exchange.
Limitations identified for naive variants of the primitive.
Abstract
AI agents are increasingly deployed to interact with other agents on behalf of users and organizations. We ask whether two such agents, operated by different entities, can carry out a parallel secret conversation while still producing a transcript that is computationally indistinguishable from an honest interaction, even to a strong passive auditor that knows the full model descriptions, the protocol, and the agents' private contexts. Building on recent work on watermarking and steganography for LLMs, we first show that if the parties possess an interaction-unique secret key, they can facilitate an optimal-rate covert conversation: the hidden conversation can exploit essentially all of the entropy present in the honest message distributions. Our main contributions concern extending this to the keyless setting, where the agents begin with no shared secret. We show that covert key…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
