1,173 research outputs found
Privacy Preserving Utility Mining: A Survey
In big data era, the collected data usually contains rich information and
hidden knowledge. Utility-oriented pattern mining and analytics have shown a
powerful ability to explore these ubiquitous data, which may be collected from
various fields and applications, such as market basket analysis, retail,
click-stream analysis, medical analysis, and bioinformatics. However, analysis
of these data with sensitive private information raises privacy concerns. To
achieve better trade-off between utility maximizing and privacy preserving,
Privacy-Preserving Utility Mining (PPUM) has become a critical issue in recent
years. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive overview of PPUM. We first
present the background of utility mining, privacy-preserving data mining and
PPUM, then introduce the related preliminaries and problem formulation of PPUM,
as well as some key evaluation criteria for PPUM. In particular, we present and
discuss the current state-of-the-art PPUM algorithms, as well as their
advantages and deficiencies in detail. Finally, we highlight and discuss some
technical challenges and open directions for future research on PPUM.Comment: 2018 IEEE International Conference on Big Data, 10 page
Measuring Membership Privacy on Aggregate Location Time-Series
While location data is extremely valuable for various applications,
disclosing it prompts serious threats to individuals' privacy. To limit such
concerns, organizations often provide analysts with aggregate time-series that
indicate, e.g., how many people are in a location at a time interval, rather
than raw individual traces. In this paper, we perform a measurement study to
understand Membership Inference Attacks (MIAs) on aggregate location
time-series, where an adversary tries to infer whether a specific user
contributed to the aggregates.
We find that the volume of contributed data, as well as the regularity and
particularity of users' mobility patterns, play a crucial role in the attack's
success. We experiment with a wide range of defenses based on generalization,
hiding, and perturbation, and evaluate their ability to thwart the attack
vis-a-vis the utility loss they introduce for various mobility analytics tasks.
Our results show that some defenses fail across the board, while others work
for specific tasks on aggregate location time-series. For instance, suppressing
small counts can be used for ranking hotspots, data generalization for
forecasting traffic, hotspot discovery, and map inference, while sampling is
effective for location labeling and anomaly detection when the dataset is
sparse. Differentially private techniques provide reasonable accuracy only in
very specific settings, e.g., discovering hotspots and forecasting their
traffic, and more so when using weaker privacy notions like crowd-blending
privacy. Overall, our measurements show that there does not exist a unique
generic defense that can preserve the utility of the analytics for arbitrary
applications, and provide useful insights regarding the disclosure of sanitized
aggregate location time-series
User's Privacy in Recommendation Systems Applying Online Social Network Data, A Survey and Taxonomy
Recommender systems have become an integral part of many social networks and
extract knowledge from a user's personal and sensitive data both explicitly,
with the user's knowledge, and implicitly. This trend has created major privacy
concerns as users are mostly unaware of what data and how much data is being
used and how securely it is used. In this context, several works have been done
to address privacy concerns for usage in online social network data and by
recommender systems. This paper surveys the main privacy concerns, measurements
and privacy-preserving techniques used in large-scale online social networks
and recommender systems. It is based on historical works on security,
privacy-preserving, statistical modeling, and datasets to provide an overview
of the technical difficulties and problems associated with privacy preserving
in online social networks.Comment: 26 pages, IET book chapter on big data recommender system
- …