Measuring Membership Privacy on Aggregate Location Time-Series

被引:0
|
作者
Pyrgelis A. [1 ]
Troncoso C. [1 ]
De Cristofaro E. [2 ]
机构
[1] École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland
[2] University College London (UCL) and Alan Turing Institute, United Kingdom
来源
Performance Evaluation Review | 2020年 / 48卷 / 01期
关键词
aggregate location time-series; membership inference attacks; mobility analytics; privacy-utility tradeoffs;
D O I
10.1145/3393691.3394200
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
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-à-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. © 2020 Copyright is held by the owner/author(s).
引用
收藏
页码:73 / 74
页数:1
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] A TIME-SERIES ANALYSIS OF AGGREGATE BUSINESS FAILURE ACTIVITY AND CREDIT CONDITIONS
    MELICHER, RW
    HEARTH, D
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS, 1988, 40 (04) : 319 - 333
  • [32] AN AGGREGATE ACCIDENT MODEL BASED ON POOLED, REGIONAL TIME-SERIES DATA
    FRIDSTROM, L
    INGEBRIGTSEN, S
    [J]. ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION, 1991, 23 (05): : 363 - 378
  • [33] Publishing Time-Series Data under Preservation of Privacy and Distance Orders
    Moon, Yang-Sae
    Kim, Hea-Suk
    Kim, Sang-Pil
    Bertino, Elisa
    [J]. DATABASE AND EXPERT SYSTEMS APPLICATIONS, PT 2, 2010, 6262 : 17 - +
  • [34] PART-GAN: Privacy-Preserving Time-Series Sharing
    Wang, Shuo
    Rudolph, Carsten
    Nepal, Surya
    Grobler, Marthie
    Chen, Shangyu
    [J]. ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORKS AND MACHINE LEARNING, ICANN 2020, PT I, 2020, 12396 : 578 - 593
  • [35] Privacy Preserving Time-Series Forecasting of User Health Data Streams
    Imtiaz, Sana
    Horchidan, Sonia-Florina
    Abbas, Zainab
    Arsalan, Muhammad
    Chaudhry, Hassan Nazeer
    Vlassov, Vladimir
    [J]. 2020 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BIG DATA (BIG DATA), 2020, : 3428 - 3437
  • [36] A New Framework for Privacy-Preserving Aggregation of Time-Series Data
    Benhamouda, Fabrice
    Joye, Marc
    Libert, Benoit
    [J]. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION AND SYSTEM SECURITY, 2016, 18 (03)
  • [37] Privacy-Preserving Publication of Time-Series Data in Smart Grid
    Lako, Franklin Leukam
    Lajoie-Mazenc, Paul
    Laurent, Maryline
    [J]. SECURITY AND COMMUNICATION NETWORKS, 2021, 2021 (2021)
  • [38] Measuring nonlinear dependence in time-series, a distance correlation approach
    Zhou, Zhou
    [J]. JOURNAL OF TIME SERIES ANALYSIS, 2012, 33 (03) : 438 - 457
  • [39] MEASURING AND COMPARING SMOOTHNESS IN TIME-SERIES THE PRODUCTION SMOOTHING HYPOTHESIS
    FROEB, L
    KOYAK, R
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ECONOMETRICS, 1994, 64 (1-2) : 97 - 122
  • [40] TIME-SERIES SAMPLE APPROACH FOR MEASURING USE IN A SMALL LIBRARY
    JONES, WG
    [J]. SPECIAL LIBRARIES, 1973, 64 (07) : 280 - 283