Silence Speaks Volumes: A New Paradigm for Covert Communication via History Timing Patterns
By: Christoph Weissenborn, Steffen Wendzel
Potential Business Impact:
Hides secret messages in normal computer talk.
A Covert Channel (CC) exploits legitimate communication mechanisms to stealthily transmit information, often bypassing traditional security controls. Among these, a novel paradigm called History Covert Channels (HCC) leverages past network events as reference points to embed covert messages. Unlike traditional timing- or storage-based CCs, which directly manipulate traffic patterns or packet contents, HCCs minimize detectability by encoding information through small pointers to historical data. This approach enables them to amplify the size of transmitted covert data by referring to more bits than are actually embedded. Recent research has explored the feasibility of such methods, demonstrating their potential to evade detection by repurposing naturally occurring network behaviors as a covert transmission medium. This paper introduces a novel method for establishing and maintaining covert communication links using relative pointers to network timing patterns, which minimizes the reliance of the HCC on centralized timekeeping and reduces the likelihood of being detected by standard network monitoring tools. We also explore the tailoring of HCCs to optimize their robustness and undetectability characteristics. Our experiments reveal a better bitrate compared to previous work.
Similar Papers
CYPRESS: Transferring Secrets in the Shadow of Visible Packets
Cryptography and Security
Hides secret messages inside normal internet traffic.
Whispering Agents: An event-driven covert communication protocol for the Internet of Agents
Cryptography and Security
Hides secret messages between talking computer agents.
Shadow Wireless Intelligence: Large Language Model-Driven Reasoning in Covert Communications
Networking and Internet Architecture
Hides secret messages in wireless signals.