English

Covertly Controlling a Linear System

Information Theory 2022-12-05 v1 Systems and Control Signal Processing Systems and Control math.IT

Abstract

Consider the problem of covertly controlling a linear system. In this problem, Alice desires to control (stabilize or change the behavior of) a linear system, while keeping an observer, Willie, unable to decide if the system is indeed being controlled or not. We formally define the problem, under a model where Willie can only observe the system's output. Focusing on AR(1) systems, we show that when Willie observes the system's output through a clean channel, an inherently unstable linear system can not be covertly stabilized. However, an inherently stable linear system can be covertly controlled, in the sense of covertly changing its parameter or resetting its memory. Moreover, we give positive and negative results for two important controllers: a minimal-information controller, where Alice is allowed to use only 11 bit per sample, and a maximal-information controller, where Alice is allowed to view the real-valued output. Unlike covert communication, where the trade-off is between rate and covertness, the results reveal an interesting \emph{three--fold} trade--off in covert control: the amount of information used by the controller, control performance and covertness.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2212.01052,
  title  = {Covertly Controlling a Linear System},
  author = {Barak Amihood and Asaf Cohen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2212.01052},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

Parts of this work will be presented at the IEEE Information Theory workshop, ITW 2022. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2202.02853