Secure Digital Semantic Communications: Fundamentals, Challenges, and Opportunities
By: Weixuan Chen , Qianqian Yang , Yuanyuan Jia and more
Potential Business Impact:
Makes wireless messages safer by checking meaning.
Semantic communication (SemCom) has emerged as a promising paradigm for future wireless networks by prioritizing task-relevant meaning over raw data delivery, thereby reducing communication overhead and improving efficiency. However, shifting from bit-accurate transmission to task-oriented delivery introduces new security and privacy risks. These include semantic leakage, semantic manipulation, knowledge base vulnerabilities, model-related attacks, and threats to authenticity and availability. Most existing secure SemCom studies focus on analog SemCom, where semantic features are mapped to continuous channel inputs. In contrast, digital SemCom transmits semantic information through discrete bits or symbols within practical transceiver pipelines, offering stronger compatibility with realworld systems while exposing a distinct and underexplored attack surface. In particular, digital SemCom typically represents semantic information over a finite alphabet through explicit digital modulation, following two main routes: probabilistic modulation and deterministic modulation. These discrete mechanisms and practical transmission procedures introduce additional vulnerabilities affecting bit- or symbol-level semantic information, the modulation stage, and packet-based delivery and protocol operations. Motivated by these challenges and the lack of a systematic analysis of secure digital SemCom, this paper reviews SemCom fundamentals, clarifies the architectural differences between analog and digital SemCom and their security implications, organizes the threat landscape for digital SemCom, and discusses potential defenses. Finally, we outline open research directions toward secure and deployable digital SemCom systems.
Similar Papers
A Survey of Secure Semantic Communications
Cryptography and Security
Makes sure smart messages stay private and safe.
Secure Semantic Communication With Homomorphic Encryption
Cryptography and Security
Lets computers share secret messages without losing meaning.
Towards Native AI in 6G Standardization: The Roadmap of Semantic Communication
Systems and Control
Lets phones understand messages, not just words.