Difference between revisions of "Differential privacy"

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=== Videos ===
=== Videos ===
* [https://www.ias.edu/events/differential-privacy Four Facets of Differential Privacy], Differential Privacy Symposium, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, Saturday, November 12. A series of talks by Cynthia Dwork, Helen Nissenbaum, Aaron Roth, Guy Rothblum, Kunal Talwar, and Jonathan Ullman. View all on the [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rs06sAJ07Go&feature=youtu.be&list=PLdDZb3TwJPZ7Ug5Ydu1j9V1m_RgtW7C9_ IAS YouTube channel].


* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekIL65D0R3o Katrina Ligett, California Institute of Technology], explains big data and differential priacy. December 17, 2013.
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekIL65D0R3o Katrina Ligett, California Institute of Technology], explains big data and differential priacy. December 17, 2013.

Revision as of 19:29, 8 February 2018

A few references on Differential Privacy, for people who don't want to get bogged down with the math.

Introduction

Printed Materials


Videos

  • Four Facets of Differential Privacy, Differential Privacy Symposium, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, Saturday, November 12. A series of talks by Cynthia Dwork, Helen Nissenbaum, Aaron Roth, Guy Rothblum, Kunal Talwar, and Jonathan Ullman. View all on the IAS YouTube channel.

Textbook

Deploying Differential Privacy

Differential Privacy in Use (Applications)

On The Map, at the US Census Bureau
RAPPOR, in Google Chrome
Uber

Advanced Topics

Improving query accuracy within the privacy budget

Differential Privacy and Floating Point Accuracy

Floating point math is not continuous, and differential privacy implementations that assume it is may experience a variety of errors that result in privacy loss. A discussion of the problems inherently in floating-point arithmetic can be found in Oracle's What Every Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic, an edited reprint of the paper What Every Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic, by David Goldberg, published in the March, 1991 issue of Computing Surveys.

"How Will Statistical Agencies Operate When All Data Are Private?" (MS #1142) has been published to Journal of Privacy and Confidentiality. http://repository.cmu.edu/jpc/vol7/iss3/1


The Fool's Gold Controversy

What's wrong with this article and with the followups?

Other attacks

Math

p for randomized response rate:

$p = \frac{e^\epsilon}{1+e^\epsilon}$

Probability that randomized response should be flipped.

See Also

Online Resources