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Leaky Thoughts: Large Reasoning Models Are Not Private Thinkers

Tommaso Green
Martin Gubri
Haritz Puerto
Sangdoo Yun
Seong Joon Oh
Author Contacts:
Main:7 Pages
8 Figures
Bibliography:4 Pages
10 Tables
Appendix:9 Pages
Abstract

We study privacy leakage in the reasoning traces of large reasoning models used as personal agents. Unlike final outputs, reasoning traces are often assumed to be internal and safe. We challenge this assumption by showing that reasoning traces frequently contain sensitive user data, which can be extracted via prompt injections or accidentally leak into outputs. Through probing and agentic evaluations, we demonstrate that test-time compute approaches, particularly increased reasoning steps, amplify such leakage. While increasing the budget of those test-time compute approaches makes models more cautious in their final answers, it also leads them to reason more verbosely and leak more in their own thinking. This reveals a core tension: reasoning improves utility but enlarges the privacy attack surface. We argue that safety efforts must extend to the model's internal thinking, not just its outputs.

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@article{green2025_2506.15674,
  title={ Leaky Thoughts: Large Reasoning Models Are Not Private Thinkers },
  author={ Tommaso Green and Martin Gubri and Haritz Puerto and Sangdoo Yun and Seong Joon Oh },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.15674},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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