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Main Authors: Dass, Prajnamaya, Ujjwal, Sonika, Novotny, Jiri, Zolotavkin, Yevhen, Laaroussi, Zakaria, Köpsell, Stefan
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.01742
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author Dass, Prajnamaya
Ujjwal, Sonika
Novotny, Jiri
Zolotavkin, Yevhen
Laaroussi, Zakaria
Köpsell, Stefan
author_facet Dass, Prajnamaya
Ujjwal, Sonika
Novotny, Jiri
Zolotavkin, Yevhen
Laaroussi, Zakaria
Köpsell, Stefan
contents The vision for 6G extends beyond mere communication, incorporating sensing capabilities to facilitate a diverse array of novel applications and services. However, the advent of joint communication and sensing (JCAS) technology introduces concerns regarding the handling of sensitive personally identifiable information (PII) pertaining to individuals and objects, along with external third-party data and disclosure. Consequently, JCAS-based applications are susceptible to privacy breaches, including location tracking, identity disclosure, profiling, and misuse of sensor data, raising significant implications under the European Union's general data protection regulation (GDPR) as well as other applicable standards. This paper critically examines emergent JCAS architectures and underscores the necessity for network functions to enable privacy-specific features in the 6G systems. We propose an enhanced JCAS architecture with additional network functions and interfaces, facilitating the management of sensing policies, consent information, and transparency guidelines, alongside the integration of sensing-specific functions and storage for sensing processing sessions. Furthermore, we conduct a comprehensive threat analysis for all interfaces, employing security threat model STRIDE and privacy threat model LINDDUN. We also summarise the identified threats using standard common weakness enumeration (CWE). Finally, we suggest the security and privacy controls as the mitigating strategies to counter the identified threats stemming from the JCAS architecture.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2405_01742
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Addressing Privacy Concerns in Joint Communication and Sensing for 6G Networks: Challenges and Prospects
Dass, Prajnamaya
Ujjwal, Sonika
Novotny, Jiri
Zolotavkin, Yevhen
Laaroussi, Zakaria
Köpsell, Stefan
Networking and Internet Architecture
The vision for 6G extends beyond mere communication, incorporating sensing capabilities to facilitate a diverse array of novel applications and services. However, the advent of joint communication and sensing (JCAS) technology introduces concerns regarding the handling of sensitive personally identifiable information (PII) pertaining to individuals and objects, along with external third-party data and disclosure. Consequently, JCAS-based applications are susceptible to privacy breaches, including location tracking, identity disclosure, profiling, and misuse of sensor data, raising significant implications under the European Union's general data protection regulation (GDPR) as well as other applicable standards. This paper critically examines emergent JCAS architectures and underscores the necessity for network functions to enable privacy-specific features in the 6G systems. We propose an enhanced JCAS architecture with additional network functions and interfaces, facilitating the management of sensing policies, consent information, and transparency guidelines, alongside the integration of sensing-specific functions and storage for sensing processing sessions. Furthermore, we conduct a comprehensive threat analysis for all interfaces, employing security threat model STRIDE and privacy threat model LINDDUN. We also summarise the identified threats using standard common weakness enumeration (CWE). Finally, we suggest the security and privacy controls as the mitigating strategies to counter the identified threats stemming from the JCAS architecture.
title Addressing Privacy Concerns in Joint Communication and Sensing for 6G Networks: Challenges and Prospects
topic Networking and Internet Architecture
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.01742