829 research outputs found

    Health Participatory Sensing Networks for Mobile Device Public Health Data Collection and Intervention

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    The pervasive availability and increasingly sophisticated functionalities of smartphones and their connected external sensors or wearable devices can provide new data collection capabilities relevant to public health. Current research and commercial efforts have concentrated on sensor-based collection of health data for personal fitness and personal healthcare feedback purposes. However, to date there has not been a detailed investigation of how such smartphones and sensors can be utilized for public health data collection. Unlike most sensing applications, in the case of public health, capturing comprehensive and detailed data is not a necessity, as aggregate data alone is in many cases sufficient for public health purposes. As such, public health data has the characteristic of being capturable whilst still not infringing privacy, as the detailed data of individuals that may allow re-identification is not needed, but rather only aggregate, de-identified and non-unique data for an individual. These types of public health data collection provide the challenge of the need to be flexible enough to answer a range of public health queries, while ensuring the level of detail returned preserves privacy. Additionally, the distribution of public health data collection request and other information to the participants without identifying the individual is a core requirement. An additional requirement for health participatory sensing networks is the ability to perform public health interventions. As with data collection, this needs to be completed in a non-identifying and privacy preserving manner. This thesis proposes a solution to these challenges, whereby a form of query assurance provides private and secure distribution of data collection requests and public health interventions to participants. While an additional, privacy preserving threshold approach to local processing of data prior to submission is used to provide re-identification protection for the participant. The evaluation finds that with manageable overheads, minimal reduction in the detail of collected data and strict communication privacy; privacy and anonymity can be preserved. This is significant for the field of participatory health sensing as a major concern of participants is most often real or perceived privacy risks of contribution

    TOP-K QUERY DISPENSATION IN SECURE SPATIAL ENVIRONMENT VIA UNTRUSTED LOCATION-BASED SERVICE PROVIDERS

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    IN Collaborative location-based information generation and sharing is considered, which become increasingly popular due to the explosive growth of Internet-capable and location-aware mobile devices. The system consists of a data collector, data contributors, location-based service providers (LBSPs), and system users. The data collector gathers reviews about points-of-interest (POIs) from data contributors, while LBSPs purchase POI data sets from the data collector and allow users to perform spatial top-k queries which ask for the POIs in a certain region and with the highest k ratings for an interested POI attribute. In practice, LBSPs are untrusted and may return fake query results for various bad motives, e.g., in favor of POIs willing to pay. Three novel schemes is used for users to detect fake spatial snapshot and moving top-k query results as an effort to foster the practical deployment and use of the proposed system

    Cloud technology options towards Free Flow of Data

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    This whitepaper collects the technology solutions that the projects in the Data Protection, Security and Privacy Cluster propose to address the challenges raised by the working areas of the Free Flow of Data initiative. The document describes the technologies, methodologies, models, and tools researched and developed by the clustered projects mapped to the ten areas of work of the Free Flow of Data initiative. The aim is to facilitate the identification of the state-of-the-art of technology options towards solving the data security and privacy challenges posed by the Free Flow of Data initiative in Europe. The document gives reference to the Cluster, the individual projects and the technologies produced by them

    Quality of service in cloud computing: Data model; resource allocation; and data availability and security

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    Philosophiae Doctor - PhDRecently, massive migration of enterprise applications to the cloud has been recorded in the Information Technology (IT) world. The number of cloud providers offering their services and the number of cloud customers interested in using such services is rapidly increasing. However, one of the challenges of cloud computing is Quality-of-Service management which denotes the level of performance, reliability, and availability offered by cloud service providers. Quality-of-Service is fundamental to cloud service providers who find the right tradeoff between Quality-of-Service levels and operational cost. In order to find out the optimal tradeoff, cloud service providers need to comply with service level agreements contracts which define an agreement between cloud service providers and cloud customers. Service level agreements are expressed in terms of quality of service (QoS) parameters such as availability, scalability performance and the service cost. On the other hand, if the cloud service provider violates the service level agreement contract, the cloud customer can file for damages and claims some penalties that can result in revenue losses, and probably detriment to the provider’s reputation. Thus, the goal of any cloud service provider is to meet the Service level agreements, while reducing the total cost of offering its services

    Data Auditing and Security in Cloud Computing: Issues, Challenges and Future Directions

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    Cloud computing is one of the significant development that utilizes progressive computational power and upgrades data distribution and data storing facilities. With cloud information services, it is essential for information to be saved in the cloud and also distributed across numerous customers. Cloud information repository is involved with issues of information integrity, data security and information access by unapproved users. Hence, an autonomous reviewing and auditing facility is necessary to guarantee that the information is effectively accommodated and used in the cloud. In this paper, a comprehensive survey on the state-of-art techniques in data auditing and security are discussed. Challenging problems in information repository auditing and security are presented. Finally, directions for future research in data auditing and security have been discussed
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