TITLE: The channel coding theorem and the security of binary
randomization
SPEAKER: Poorvi Vora
Chief Technology Office
Imaging and Printing Group
DATE: 2:00pm, Monday, October 21, 2002
LOCATION: Half Dome, 3L
HOST: Gadiel Seroussi
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ABSTRACT:
Randomization is the process of perturbing data points to provide
security through information-theoretic uncertainty. It is appropriate
in applications where individual data points are to be protected, but
statistical information is to be revealed. We propose that the
binary randomization protocol be viewed as a channel for transmitting
the information that is to be kept secret. We show that a simple
application of the basic theorems of Shannon provides lower bounds on
the complexity of successful attacks. We use these bounds to define
the privacy provided by a protocol: the (tight) lower bound on the
number of queries required to successfully estimate a single
attribute. Through the use of Shannon's channel coding theorem, the
privacy of randomization is the inverse of the protocol channel
capacity.