LGAICRCYApr 10, 2023

Analysing Fairness of Privacy-Utility Mobility Models

arXiv:2304.06469v12 citationsh-index: 18
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses fairness issues in privacy techniques for spatial-temporal data sharing, which is incremental as it highlights a previously overlooked tension between privacy and individual fairness.

The paper tackled the problem of fairness in privacy-preserving mobility models, showing that while two state-of-the-art models guarantee group fairness, they violate individual fairness criteria, leading to disparate privacy gains for users with similar trajectories.

Preserving the individuals' privacy in sharing spatial-temporal datasets is critical to prevent re-identification attacks based on unique trajectories. Existing privacy techniques tend to propose ideal privacy-utility tradeoffs, however, largely ignore the fairness implications of mobility models and whether such techniques perform equally for different groups of users. The quantification between fairness and privacy-aware models is still unclear and there barely exists any defined sets of metrics for measuring fairness in the spatial-temporal context. In this work, we define a set of fairness metrics designed explicitly for human mobility, based on structural similarity and entropy of the trajectories. Under these definitions, we examine the fairness of two state-of-the-art privacy-preserving models that rely on GAN and representation learning to reduce the re-identification rate of users for data sharing. Our results show that while both models guarantee group fairness in terms of demographic parity, they violate individual fairness criteria, indicating that users with highly similar trajectories receive disparate privacy gain. We conclude that the tension between the re-identification task and individual fairness needs to be considered for future spatial-temporal data analysis and modelling to achieve a privacy-preserving fairness-aware setting.

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