Online social networks often involve very large numbers of users who share very large volumes of content. This content is increasingly being tagged with geo-spatial and temporal coordinates that may then be used in services. For example, a service may retrieve photos taken in a certain region. The resulting geo-aware social networks (GeoSNs) pose privacy threats beyond those found in location-based services. Content published in a GeoSN is often associated with references to multiple users, without the publisher being aware of the privacy preferences of those users. Moreover, this content is often accessible to multiple users. This renders it difficult for GeoSN users to control which information about them is available and to whom it is available. This paper addresses two privacy threats that occur in GeoSNs: location privacy and absence privacy. The former concerns the availability of information about the presence of users in specific locations at given times, while the latter concerns the availability of information about the absence of an individual from specific locations during given periods of time. The challenge addressed is that of supporting privacy while still enabling useful services. We believe this is the first paper to formalize these two notions of privacy and to propose techniques for enforcing them. The techniques offer privacy guarantees, and the paper reports on empirical performance studies of the techniques.

Preserving location and absence privacy in geo-social networks / D. Freni, C. Ruiz Vicente, S. Mascetti, C. Bettini, C.S. Jensen - In: CIKM '10 : proceedings of the 19th ACM international conference on information and knowledge management : Toronto, Canada, October 26-30, 2010New York : ACM Press, 2010. - ISBN 9781450300995. - pp. 309-318 (( Intervento presentato al 19. convegno ACM international conference on Information and knowledge management tenutosi a Toronto, Canada nel 2010 [10.1145/1871437.1871480].

Preserving location and absence privacy in geo-social networks

D. Freni
Primo
;
S. Mascetti;C. Bettini
Penultimo
;
2010

Abstract

Online social networks often involve very large numbers of users who share very large volumes of content. This content is increasingly being tagged with geo-spatial and temporal coordinates that may then be used in services. For example, a service may retrieve photos taken in a certain region. The resulting geo-aware social networks (GeoSNs) pose privacy threats beyond those found in location-based services. Content published in a GeoSN is often associated with references to multiple users, without the publisher being aware of the privacy preferences of those users. Moreover, this content is often accessible to multiple users. This renders it difficult for GeoSN users to control which information about them is available and to whom it is available. This paper addresses two privacy threats that occur in GeoSNs: location privacy and absence privacy. The former concerns the availability of information about the presence of users in specific locations at given times, while the latter concerns the availability of information about the absence of an individual from specific locations during given periods of time. The challenge addressed is that of supporting privacy while still enabling useful services. We believe this is the first paper to formalize these two notions of privacy and to propose techniques for enforcing them. The techniques offer privacy guarantees, and the paper reports on empirical performance studies of the techniques.
Absence privacy; Location privacy; Social networks
Settore INF/01 - Informatica
2010
ACM
Book Part (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/154179
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