TY - JOUR
T1 - SABRE: A Sensitive Attribute Bucketization and REdistribution framework for t-closeness
AU - Cao, Jianneng
AU - Karras, Panagiotis
AU - Kalnis, Panos
AU - Tan, Kianlee
N1 - KAUST Repository Item: Exported on 2020-10-01
Acknowledgements: We thank Tiancheng Li and Ninghui Li from Purdue University for kindly providing us the implementations of tIncognito and tMondrian. This work is supported by two AcRF grants from Singapore's MOE. Jianneng Cao and Kian-Lee Tan are partially supported by grant T12-0702-P02. Panagiotis Karras is supported by grant T1 251RES0807.
PY - 2010/5/19
Y1 - 2010/5/19
N2 - Today, the publication of microdata poses a privacy threat: anonymous personal records can be re-identified using third data sources. Past research has tried to develop a concept of privacy guarantee that an anonymized data set should satisfy before publication, culminating in the notion of t-closeness. To satisfy t-closeness, the records in a data set need to be grouped into Equivalence Classes (ECs), such that each EC contains records of indistinguishable quasi-identifier values, and its local distribution of sensitive attribute (SA) values conforms to the global table distribution of SA values. However, despite this progress, previous research has not offered an anonymization algorithm tailored for t-closeness. In this paper, we cover this gap with SABRE, a SA Bucketization and REdistribution framework for t-closeness. SABRE first greedily partitions a table into buckets of similar SA values and then redistributes the tuples of each bucket into dynamically determined ECs. This approach is facilitated by a property of the Earth Mover's Distance (EMD) that we employ as a measure of distribution closeness: If the tuples in an EC are picked proportionally to the sizes of the buckets they hail from, then the EMD of that EC is tightly upper-bounded using localized upper bounds derived for each bucket. We prove that if the t-closeness constraint is properly obeyed during partitioning, then it is obeyed by the derived ECs too. We develop two instantiations of SABRE and extend it to a streaming environment. Our extensive experimental evaluation demonstrates that SABRE achieves information quality superior to schemes that merely applied algorithms tailored for other models to t-closeness, and can be much faster as well. © 2010 Springer-Verlag.
AB - Today, the publication of microdata poses a privacy threat: anonymous personal records can be re-identified using third data sources. Past research has tried to develop a concept of privacy guarantee that an anonymized data set should satisfy before publication, culminating in the notion of t-closeness. To satisfy t-closeness, the records in a data set need to be grouped into Equivalence Classes (ECs), such that each EC contains records of indistinguishable quasi-identifier values, and its local distribution of sensitive attribute (SA) values conforms to the global table distribution of SA values. However, despite this progress, previous research has not offered an anonymization algorithm tailored for t-closeness. In this paper, we cover this gap with SABRE, a SA Bucketization and REdistribution framework for t-closeness. SABRE first greedily partitions a table into buckets of similar SA values and then redistributes the tuples of each bucket into dynamically determined ECs. This approach is facilitated by a property of the Earth Mover's Distance (EMD) that we employ as a measure of distribution closeness: If the tuples in an EC are picked proportionally to the sizes of the buckets they hail from, then the EMD of that EC is tightly upper-bounded using localized upper bounds derived for each bucket. We prove that if the t-closeness constraint is properly obeyed during partitioning, then it is obeyed by the derived ECs too. We develop two instantiations of SABRE and extend it to a streaming environment. Our extensive experimental evaluation demonstrates that SABRE achieves information quality superior to schemes that merely applied algorithms tailored for other models to t-closeness, and can be much faster as well. © 2010 Springer-Verlag.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10754/561607
UR - http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s00778-010-0191-9
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=78751575843&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00778-010-0191-9
DO - 10.1007/s00778-010-0191-9
M3 - Article
SN - 1066-8888
VL - 20
SP - 59
EP - 81
JO - The VLDB Journal
JF - The VLDB Journal
IS - 1
ER -