Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Shanghai Jiao Tong Univ., Shanghai, China
Abstract :
With the popularity of mobile wireless devices equipped with various kinds of sensing abilities, a new service paradigm named participatory sensing has emerged to provide users with brand new life experience. However, the wide application of participatory sensing has its own challenges, among which privacy and multimedia data quality preservations are two critical problems. Unfortunately, none of the existing work has fully solved the problem of privacy and quality preserving participatory sensing with multimedia data. In this paper, we propose SLICER, which is the first k-anonymous privacy preserving scheme for participatory sensing with multimedia data. SLICER integrates a data coding technique and message transfer strategies, to achieve strong protection of participants´ privacy, while maintaining high data quality. Specifically, we study two kinds of data transfer strategies, namely transfer on meet up (TMU) and minimal cost transfer (MCT). For MCT, we propose two different but complimentary algorithms, including an approximation algorithm and a heuristic algorithm, subject to different strengths of the requirement. Furthermore, we have implemented SLICER and evaluated its performance using publicly released taxi traces. Our evaluation results show that SLICER achieves high data quality, with low computation and communication overhead.
Keywords :
data privacy; mobile communication; multimedia communication; SLICER; approximation algorithm; data coding technique; data transfer strategies; heuristic algorithm; k-anonymous privacy preserving scheme; message transfer strategies; minimal cost transfer; mobile wireless devices; multimedia data quality preservations; participatory sensing systems; privacy preserving multimedia data aggregation; quality preserving multimedia data aggregation; sensing abilities; service paradigm; taxi traces; Cryptography; Data privacy; Encoding; Generators; Multimedia communication; Privacy; Sensors; K-anonymity; Participatory sensing; erasure coding; privacy preservation;