LGCRFeb 24, 2019

Privacy Preserving Location Data Publishing: A Machine Learning Approach

arXiv:1902.08934v265 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses privacy risks for users in open data publication, but it is incremental as it builds on existing anonymization techniques with machine learning enhancements.

The paper tackles the problem of preserving privacy when publishing spatiotemporal trajectory datasets by proposing a machine learning-based anonymization framework, which significantly improves dataset utility compared to existing methods.

Publishing datasets plays an essential role in open data research and promoting transparency of government agencies. However, such data publication might reveal users' private information. One of the most sensitive sources of data is spatiotemporal trajectory datasets. Unfortunately, merely removing unique identifiers cannot preserve the privacy of users. Adversaries may know parts of the trajectories or be able to link the published dataset to other sources for the purpose of user identification. Therefore, it is crucial to apply privacy preserving techniques before the publication of spatiotemporal trajectory datasets. In this paper, we propose a robust framework for the anonymization of spatiotemporal trajectory datasets termed as machine learning based anonymization (MLA). By introducing a new formulation of the problem, we are able to apply machine learning algorithms for clustering the trajectories and propose to use $k$-means algorithm for this purpose. A variation of $k$-means algorithm is also proposed to preserve the privacy in overly sensitive datasets. Moreover, we improve the alignment process by considering multiple sequence alignment as part of the MLA. The framework and all the proposed algorithms are applied to TDrive and Geolife location datasets. The experimental results indicate a significantly higher utility of datasets by anonymization based on MLA framework.

Foundations

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

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