A Novel Framework for Transmitter Privacy in Integrated Sensing and Communication
Abstract
ISAC systems introduce new privacy risks because an unintended sensing node may exploit the shared radio waveform to infer transmitter-related information even when the communication payload remains secure. This paper investigates transmitter privacy, defined as limiting unauthorized inference of transmitter-related information through channel estimation, in a RIS-aided multi-antenna wireless system with a transmitter, a legitimate receiver, a malicious sensor, and a RIS. The malicious sensor is...
Description / Details
ISAC systems introduce new privacy risks because an unintended sensing node may exploit the shared radio waveform to infer transmitter-related information even when the communication payload remains secure. This paper investigates transmitter privacy, defined as limiting unauthorized inference of transmitter-related information through channel estimation, in a RIS-aided multi-antenna wireless system with a transmitter, a legitimate receiver, a malicious sensor, and a RIS. The malicious sensor is assumed to estimate the transmitter--sensor channel, and the resulting channel state information can then support unauthorized sensing, inference, or related signal processing. To mitigate this threat, we consider a privacy-oriented design in which the transmitter adopts superposition-based signaling with a message signal and transmit-side artificial noise, while the RIS shapes the propagation environment in a privacy-aware manner. The channel-estimation performance at the malicious sensor is first analyzed under imperfect prior knowledge, and both the true and predicted mean-square-error expressions are derived. Based on this analysis, we formulate a joint active--passive beamforming design problem that maximizes the malicious sensor's predicted channel-estimation error subject to a communication quality-of-service constraint, a transmit-power budget, and the unit-modulus constraints of the RIS. The resulting non-convex problem is handled through a numerically efficient alternating-optimization framework based on an augmented Lagrangian reformulation. Numerical results show that RIS-assisted propagation shaping can substantially degrade unauthorized channel estimation relative to the non-RIS case while preserving reliable communication, and further show that the privacy gains also improve a more direct sensing metric, namely the malicious sensor's angle-of-arrival estimation accuracy.
Source: arXiv:2604.16068v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.16068v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.16068v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.16068v1
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Apr 20, 2026
Chemical Engineering
Engineering
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