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\section*{Handout 7 (Privacy)}
The first motor car was invented around 1886. For ten years,
until 1896, the law in the UK and elsewhere required a person
to walk in front of any moving car waving a red flag. Cars
were such a novelty that most people did not know what to make
of them. The person with the red flag was intended to warn the
public, for example horse owners, about the impending
novelty---a car. In my humble opinion, we are at the same
stage of development with privacy. Nobody really knows what it
is about or what it is good for. All seems very hazy. The
result is that the world of ``privacy'' looks a little bit
like the old Wild West. Anything seems to go.
For example, UCAS, a charity set up to help students to apply
to universities, has a commercial unit that happily sells your
email addresses to anybody who forks out enough money in order
to be able to bombard you with spam. Yes, you can opt out very
often in such ``schemes'', but in case of UCAS any opt-out
will limit also legit emails you might actually be interested
in.\footnote{The main objectionable point, in my opinion, is
that the \emph{charity} everybody has to use for HE
applications has actually very honourable goals (e.g.~assist
applicants in gaining access to universities), but in their
small print (or better under the link ``About us'') reveals
they set up their organisation so that they can also
shamelessly sell email addresses they ``harvest''. Everything
is of course very legal\ldots{}moral?\ldots{}well that is in
the eye of the beholder. See:
\url{http://www.ucas.com/about-us/inside-ucas/advertising-opportunities}
or
\url{http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014/mar/12/ucas-sells-marketing-access-student-data-advertisers}}
Another example: Verizon, an ISP who provides you with
connectivity, has found a ``nice'' side-business too: When you
have enabled all privacy guards in your browser, the few you
have at your disposal, Verizon happily adds a kind of cookie
to your
HTTP-requests.\footnote{\url{http://webpolicy.org/2014/10/24/how-verizons-advertising-header-works/}}
As shown in the picture below, this cookie will be sent to
every web-site you visit. The web-sites then can forward the
cookie to advertisers who in turn pay Verizon to tell them
everything they want to know about the person who just made
this request, that is you.
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\includegraphics[scale=0.21]{../pics/verizon.png}
\end{center}
\noindent How disgusting? Even worse, Verizon is not known for
being the cheapest ISP on the planet (completely the
contrary), and also not known for providing the fastest
possible speeds, but rather for being among the few ISPs in
the US with a quasi-monopolistic ``market distribution''.
Well, we could go on and on\ldots{}and that has not even
started us yet with all the naughty things NSA \& Friends are
up to. Why does privacy matter? Nobody, I think, has a
conclusive answer to this question yet. Maybe the following four
notions help with clarifying the overall picture somewhat:
\begin{itemize}
\item \textbf{Secrecy} is the mechanism used to limit the
number of principals with access to information (e.g.,
cryptography or access controls). For example I better
keep my password secret, otherwise people from the wrong
side of the law might impersonate me.
\item \textbf{Confidentiality} is the obligation to protect
the secrets of other people or organisations (secrecy
for the benefit of an organisation). For example as a
staff member at King's I have access to data, even
private data, I am allowed to use in my work but not
allowed to disclose to anyone else.
\item \textbf{Anonymity} is the ability to leave no evidence of
an activity (e.g., sharing a secret). This is not equal
with privacy---anonymity is required in many
circumstances, for example for whistle-blowers,
voting, exam marking and so on.
\item \textbf{Privacy} is the ability or right to protect your
personal secrets (secrecy for the benefit of an
individual). For example, in a job interview, I might
not like to disclose that I am pregnant, if I were
a woman, or that I am a father. Similarly, I might not
like to disclose my location data, because thieves might
break into my house if they know I am away at work.
Privacy is essentially everything which `shouldn't be
anybody's business'.
\end{itemize}
\noindent While this might provide us with some rough
definitions, the problem with privacy is that it is an
extremely fine line what should stay private and what should
not. For example, since I am working in academia, I am every
so often very happy to be a digital exhibitionist: I am very
happy to disclose all `trivia' related to my work on my
personal web-page. This is a kind of bragging that is normal
in academia (at least in the field of CS), even expected if
you look for a job. I am even happy that Google maintains a
profile about all my academic papers and their citations.
On the other hand I would be very irritated if anybody I do
not know had a too close look on my private live---it
shouldn't be anybody's business. The reason is that knowledge
about my private life usually is used against me. As mentioned
above, public location data might mean I get robbed. If
supermarkets build a profile of my shopping habits, they will
use it to \emph{their} advantage---surely not to \emph{my}
advantage. Also whatever might be collected about my life will
always be an incomplete, or even misleading, picture---for
example I am sure my creditworthiness score was temporarily(?)
destroyed by not having a regular income in this country
(before coming to King's I worked in Munich for five years).
To correct such incomplete or flawed credit history data there
is, since recently, a law that allows you to check what
information is held about you for determining your
creditworthiness. But this concerns only a very small part of
the data that is held about me/you.
Take the example of Stephen Hawking: when he was diagnosed
with his disease, he was given a life expectancy of two years.
If an employer would know about such problems, would they have
employed Hawking? Now he is enjoying his 70+ birthday.
Clearly personal medical data needs to stay private.
To cut a long story short, I let you ponder about the two
statements that often voiced in discussions about privacy:
\begin{itemize}
\item \textit{``You have zero privacy anyway. Get over it.''}\\
\mbox{}\hfill{}{\small{}by Scott Mcnealy (CEO of Sun)}
\item \textit{``If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing
to fear.''}
\end{itemize}
\noindent An article that attempts a deeper analysis appeared
in 2011 in the Chronicle of Higher Education
\begin{center}
\url{http://chronicle.com/article/Why-Privacy-Matters-Even-if/127461/}
\end{center}
\noindent Funnily, or maybe not so funnily, the author of this
article carefully tries to construct an argument that does not
only attack the nothing-to-hide statement in cases where
governments \& Co collect people's deepest secrets, or
pictures of people's naked bodies, but an argument that
applies also in cases where governments ``only'' collect data
relevant to, say, preventing terrorism. The fun is of course
that in 2011 we could just not imagine that respected
governments would do such infantile things as intercepting
people's nude photos. Well, since Snowden we know some people
at the NSA did exactly that and then shared such photos among
colleagues as ``fringe benefit''.
\subsubsection*{Re-Identification Attacks}
Apart from philosophical musings, there are fortunately also
some real technical problems with privacy. The problem I want
to focus on in this handout is how to safely disclose datasets
containing potentially private data, say health data. What can
go wrong with such disclosures can be illustrated with four
well-known examples:
\begin{itemize}
\item In 2006, a then young company called Netflix offered a 1
Mio \$ prize to anybody who could improve their movie
rating algorithm. For this they disclosed a dataset
containing 10\% of all Netflix users at the time
(appr.~500K). They removed names, but included numerical
ratings of movies as well as times of ratings. Though
some information was perturbed (i.e., slightly
modified).
Two researchers had a closer look at this anonymised
data and compared it with public data available from the
International Movie Database (IMDb). They found that 98
\% of the entries could be re-identified in the Netflix
dataset: either by their ratings or by the dates the
ratings were uploaded. The result was a class-action
suit against Netflix, which was only recently resolved
involving a lot of money.
\item In the 1990ies, medical datasets were often made public
for research purposes. This was done in anonymised form
with names removed, but birth dates, gender, ZIP-code
were retained. In one case where such data about
hospital visits of state employees in Massachusetts was
made public, the then governor assured the public that
the released dataset protected patient privacy by
deleting identifiers. A graduate student could not
resist cross-referencing public voter data with the
released data including birth dates, gender and
ZIP-code. The result was that she could send the
governor his own hospital record. It turns out that
birth dates, gender and ZIP-code uniquely identify 87\%
people in the US.
\item In 2006, AOL published 20 million Web search queries
collected from 650,000 users (names had been deleted).
This was again done for research purposes. However,
within days an old lady, Thelma Arnold, from Lilburn,
Georgia, (11,596 inhabitants) was identified as user
No.~4417749 in this dataset. It turned out that search
engine queries are deep windows into people's private
lives.
\item Genomic-Wide Association Studies (GWAS) was a public
database of gene-frequency studies linked to diseases.
you only needed partial DNA information in order to
identify whether an individual was part of the study —
DB closed in 2008
\end{itemize}
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http://randomwalker.info/teaching/fall-2012-privacy-technologies/?
http://chronicle.com/article/Why-Privacy-Matters-Even-if/127461/
http://repository.cmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1077&context=hcii
https://josephhall.org/papers/NYU-MCC-1303-S2012_privacy_syllabus.pdf
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