Evaluating the Privacy and Utility of Time-Series Data Perturbation Algorithms

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Abstract

Data collected from sensor-rich systems may reveal user-related patterns that represent private information. Sensitive patterns from time-series data can be protected using diverse perturbation methods; however, choosing the method that provides the desired privacy and utility level is challenging. This paper proposes a new procedure for evaluating the utility and privacy of perturbation techniques and an algorithm for comparing perturbation methods. The contribution is significant for those involved in protecting time-series data collected from various sensors as the approach is sensor-type-independent, algorithm-independent, and data-independent. The analysis of the impact of data integrity attacks on the perturbed data follows the methodology. Experimental results obtained using actual data collected from a VW Passat vehicle via the OBD-II port demonstrate the applicability of the approach to measuring the utility and privacy of perturbation algorithms. Moreover, important benefits have been identified: the proposed approach measures both privacy and utility, various distortion and perturbation methods can be compared (no matter how different), and an evaluation of the impact of data integrity attacks on perturbed data is possible.

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APA

Roman, A. S. (2023). Evaluating the Privacy and Utility of Time-Series Data Perturbation Algorithms. Mathematics, 11(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/math11051260

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