CRJul 26, 2013

Machine-Readable Privacy Certificates for Services

arXiv:1307.6980v14 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses privacy compliance risks for organizations and clients in web services, though it is incremental as it builds on existing conceptual models.

The paper tackles the problem of ensuring effective data protection in web services by proposing a machine-readable privacy certification scheme, which automates the matching of client privacy requirements with service provider guarantees and demonstrates its application through a worked-out instance for a banking financial service.

Privacy-aware processing of personal data on the web of services requires managing a number of issues arising both from the technical and the legal domain. Several approaches have been proposed to matching privacy requirements (on the clients side) and privacy guarantees (on the service provider side). Still, the assurance of effective data protection (when possible) relies on substantial human effort and exposes organizations to significant (non-)compliance risks. In this paper we put forward the idea that a privacy certification scheme producing and managing machine-readable artifacts in the form of privacy certificates can play an important role towards the solution of this problem. Digital privacy certificates represent the reasons why a privacy property holds for a service and describe the privacy measures supporting it. Also, privacy certificates can be used to automatically select services whose certificates match the client policies (privacy requirements). Our proposal relies on an evolution of the conceptual model developed in the Assert4Soa project and on a certificate format specifically tailored to represent privacy properties. To validate our approach, we present a worked-out instance showing how privacy property Retention-based unlinkability can be certified for a banking financial service.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes