Location obfuscation
Location obfuscation is a technique used in location-based services or information systems to protect the location of the users by slightly altering, substituting or generalizing their location in order to avoid reflecting their real position.
A formal definition of location obfuscation can be "the means of deliberately degrading the quality of information about an individual's location in order to protect that individual's location privacy.[1]
Obfuscation techniques
The most common techniques to perform this change are:
- Pseudonyms and the use of third party location providers[2]
- "Spatial cloaking" techniques in which a user is k-anonymous if her exact location cannot be distinguished among k-1 other users [3]
- "Invisible cloaking", in which no locations are provides for certain zones
- Adding random noise to the position
- Rounding, which uses landmarks to approximate the location [4]
- Redefinition of possible areas of location.[5]
One example of the application of location obfuscation can be seen in the following figure.
In this figure, a linear path is obfuscated by two versions of the random noise technique, in which a maximum random noise of 20 (red) and 40 (green) meters is added to the original path (blue), showing a very different trajectory and not revealing the real location of the user.
References
- ↑ M. Duckham, L. Kulik and A. Birtley, "A Formal Model of Obfuscation and Negotiation for Location Privacy." In Proc. Pervasive 2005. LCNC 3468/2005, pp. 243–251, 2005
- ↑ T. Rodden, A. Friday, H. Muller, and A. Dix, "A Lightweight Approach to Managing Privacy in Location-Based Services". Technical Report. Equator-02-058. CSTR-07-006, University of Nottingham and Lancaster University and University of Bristol. October 2002.
- ↑ M. Gruteser and D. Grunwald, "Anonymous usage of location-based services through spatial and temporal cloaking". In Proc. MobiSys ’03, pp. 31–42, 2003.
- ↑ Krumm, J, “Inference Attacks on Location Tracks”. In Proc. Pervasive 2007, Springer-Verlag, pp. 127–143.
- ↑ Ardagna, Claudio; Cremonini, Marco, De Capitani di Vimercati, Sabrina, Samarati, Pierangela (1 January 2011). "An Obfuscation-Based Approach for Protecting Location Privacy". IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing. 8 (1): 13–27. doi:10.1109/TDSC.2009.25. Cite uses deprecated parameter
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