Privacy Preserving Clustering by Data Transformation

Authors

  • Stanley R. M. Oliveira University of Alberta
  • Osmar R. Zaiane University of Alberta

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5753/jidm.2010.940

Abstract

Despite its benefit in a wide range of applications, data mining techniques also have raised a number of ethical issues. Some such issues include those of privacy, data security, intellectual property rights, and many others. In this paper, we address the privacy problem against unauthorized secondary use of information. To do so, we introduce a family of geometric data transformation methods (GDTMs) which ensure that the mining process will not violate privacy up to a certain degree of security. We focus primarily on privacy preserving data clustering, notably on partition-based and hierarchical methods. Our proposed methods distort only confidential numerical attributes to meet privacy requirements, while preserving general features for clustering analysis. Our experiments demonstrate that our methods are effective and provide acceptable values in practice for balancing privacy and accuracy. We report the main results of our performance evaluation and discuss some open research issues.

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Published

2010-05-27

How to Cite

Oliveira, S. R. M., & Zaiane, O. R. (2010). Privacy Preserving Clustering by Data Transformation. Journal of Information and Data Management, 1(1), 37. https://doi.org/10.5753/jidm.2010.940

Issue

Section

Regular Papers