Private Location Sharing for Decentralized Routing services
Data-driven methodologies offer many exciting upsides, but they also introduce new challenges, particularly in the realm of user privacy. Specifically, the way data is collected can pose privacy risks to end users. In many routing services, a single entity (e.g., the routing service provider) collec...
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Zusammenfassung: | Data-driven methodologies offer many exciting upsides, but they also
introduce new challenges, particularly in the realm of user privacy.
Specifically, the way data is collected can pose privacy risks to end users. In
many routing services, a single entity (e.g., the routing service provider)
collects and manages user trajectory data. When it comes to user privacy, these
systems have a central point of failure since users have to trust that this
entity will not sell or use their data to infer sensitive private information.
Unfortunately, in practice many advertising companies offer to buy such data
for the sake of targeted advertisements.
With this as motivation, we study the problem of using location data for
routing services in a privacy-preserving way. Rather than having users report
their location to a central operator, we present a protocol in which users
participate in a decentralized and privacy-preserving computation to estimate
travel times for the roads in the network in a way that no individuals'
location is ever observed by any other party. The protocol uses the Laplace
mechanism in conjunction with secure multi-party computation to ensure that it
is cryptogrpahically secure and that its output is differentially private.
A natural question is if privacy necessitates degradation in accuracy or
system performance. We show that if a road has sufficiently high capacity, then
the travel time estimated by our protocol is provably close to the ground truth
travel time. We validate the protocol through numerical experiments which show
that using the protocol as a routing service provides privacy guarantees with
minimal overhead to user travel time. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2202.13305 |