Remote State Estimation with Privacy Against Active Eavesdroppers
This paper considers a cyber-physical system under an active eavesdropping attack. A remote legitimate user estimates the state of a linear plant from the state information received from a sensor. Transmissions from the sensor occur via an insecure and unreliable network. An active eavesdropper may...
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper considers a cyber-physical system under an active eavesdropping
attack. A remote legitimate user estimates the state of a linear plant from the
state information received from a sensor. Transmissions from the sensor occur
via an insecure and unreliable network. An active eavesdropper may perform an
attack during system operation. The eavesdropper intercepts transmissions from
the sensor, whilst simultaneously sabotaging the data transfer from the sensor
to the remote legitimate user to harm its estimation performance. To maintain
state confidentiality, we propose an encoding scheme that is activated on the
detection of an eavesdropper. Our scheme transmits noise based on a
pseudo-random indicator, pre-arranged at the legitimate user and sensor. The
transmission of noise harms the eavesdropper's performance, more than that of
the legitimate user. Using the proposed encoding scheme, we impair the
eavesdropper's expected estimation performance, whilst minimising expected
performance degradation at the legitimate user. We explore the trade-off
between state confidentiality and legitimate user performance degradation
through selecting the probability that the sensor transmits noise. Under
certain design choices, the trace of the expected estimation error covariance
of the eavesdropper is greater than that of the legitimate user. Numerical
examples are provided to illustrate the proposed encoding scheme. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2308.08790 |