DocumentCode
2877286
Title
Challenges in Preserving Location Privacy in Peer-to-Peer Environments
Author
Mokbel, Mohamed F. ; Chow, Chi-Yin
Author_Institution
University of Minnesota, USA
fYear
2006
fDate
38869
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
1
Abstract
In location-based services (LBS), users have to continuously report their locations to the database server to entertain the service. For example, a user asking about her nearest gas station has to report her exact location to the database server. With untrustworthy servers, LBS may pose a major privacy threat on its users. In other words, the existing model of LBS trades service for user privacy. To tackle this privacy threat, several centralized privacy-preserving frameworks are proposed for LBS, in which a third trusted party is used as a middleware to blur user exact locations into spatial regions, in order to achieve k-anonymity, i.e., a user is indistinguishable among other k - 1 users. However, the centralized third trusted party could be the system bottleneck or single point of failure. The state-of-the-art peer-to-peer (P2P) communication technology adds a new dimension to the privacy-preserving techniques in LBS. The users holding P2P communication devices possess the ability to collaborate with one another to blur their exact locations into spatial regions without any help from centralized third trusted parties. In this paper, we present the challenges and research issues that emerge from deploying the P2P privacy-preserving framework in LBS.
Keywords
Collaboration; Communications technology; Computer science; Data engineering; Data privacy; Databases; Global Positioning System; Middleware; Peer to peer computing; Radiofrequency identification;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Web-Age Information Management Workshops, 2006. WAIM '06. Seventh International Conference on
Conference_Location
Hong Kong, China
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2705-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/WAIMW.2006.8
Filename
4027161
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