In:
Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment, Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), Vol. 7, No. 12 ( 2014-08), p. 1155-1166
Abstract:
Numerous applications require continuous publication of statistics or monitoring purposes, such as real-time traffic analysis, timely disease outbreak discovery, and social trends observation. These statistics may be derived from sensitive user data and, hence, necessitate privacy preservation. A notable paradigm for offering strong privacy guarantees in statistics publishing is ε-differential privacy. However, there is limited literature that adapts this concept to settings where the statistics are computed over an infinite stream of "events" (i.e., data items generated by the users), and published periodically. These works aim at hiding a single event over the entire stream. We argue that, in most practical scenarios, sensitive information is revealed from multiple events occurring at contiguous time instances. Towards this end, we put forth the novel notion of w - event privacy over infinite streams, which protects any event sequence occurring in w successive time instants. We first formulate our privacy concept, motivate its importance, and introduce a methodology for achieving it. We next design two instantiations, whose utility is independent of the stream length. Finally, we confirm the practicality of our solutions experimenting with real data.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
2150-8097
DOI:
10.14778/2732977.2732989
Language:
English
Publisher:
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publication Date:
2014
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2478691-3