SynTF: Synthetic and Differentially Private Term Frequency Vectors for Privacy-Preserving Text Mining

May 02, 2018 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval

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Authors Benjamin Weggenmann, Florian Kerschbaum arXiv ID 1805.00904 Category cs.CR: Cryptography & Security Cross-listed cs.IR Citations 53 Venue Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Text mining and information retrieval techniques have been developed to assist us with analyzing, organizing and retrieving documents with the help of computers. In many cases, it is desirable that the authors of such documents remain anonymous: Search logs can reveal sensitive details about a user, critical articles or messages about a company or government might have severe or fatal consequences for a critic, and negative feedback in customer surveys might negatively impact business relations if they are identified. Simply removing personally identifying information from a document is, however, insufficient to protect the writer's identity: Given some reference texts of suspect authors, so-called authorship attribution methods can reidentfy the author from the text itself. One of the most prominent models to represent documents in many common text mining and information retrieval tasks is the vector space model where each document is represented as a vector, typically containing its term frequencies or related quantities. We therefore propose an automated text anonymization approach that produces synthetic term frequency vectors for the input documents that can be used in lieu of the original vectors. We evaluate our method on an exemplary text classification task and demonstrate that it only has a low impact on its accuracy. In contrast, we show that our method strongly affects authorship attribution techniques to the level that they become infeasible with a much stronger decline in accuracy. Other than previous authorship obfuscation methods, our approach is the first that fulfills differential privacy and hence comes with a provable plausible deniability guarantee.
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