Home
Scholarly Works
PLP: Protecting Location Privacy against...
Conference

PLP: Protecting Location Privacy against Correlation-Analysis Attack in Crowdsensing

Abstract

Crowdsensing applications require individuals to share local and personal sensing data with others to produce valuable knowledge and services. Meanwhile, it has raised concerns especially for location privacy. Users may wish to prevent privacy leak and publish as many non-sensitive contexts as possible. Simply suppressing sensitive contexts is vulnerable to the adversaries exploiting spatio-temporal correlations in users' behavior. In this work, we present PLP, a crowdsensing scheme which preserves privacy while maximizes the amount of data collection by filtering a user's context stream. PLP leverages a conditional random field to model the spatio-temporal correlations among the contexts, and proposes a speed-up algorithm to learn the weaknesses in the correlations. Even if the adversaries are strong enough to know the filtering system and the weaknesses, PLP can still provably preserves privacy, with little computational cost for online operations. PLP is evaluated and validated over two real-world smartphone context traces of 34 users. The experimental results show that PLP efficiently protects privacy without sacrificing much utility.

Authors

Zhang S; Ma Q; Zhu T; Liu K; Zhang L; He W; Liu Y

Pagination

pp. 111-119

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Publication Date

January 1, 2015

DOI

10.1109/icpp.2015.20

Name of conference

2015 44th International Conference on Parallel Processing
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team