Title
Privacy-enhanced middleware for location-based sub-community discovery in implicit social groups
Abstract
Abstract In our connected world, recommender services have become widely known for their ability to provide expert and personalize information to participants of diverse applications. The excessive growth of social networks, a new kind of services are being embraced which are termed as “group based recommendation services”, where recommender services can be utilized to discover sub-communities within implicit social groups and provide referrals to new participants in order to join various sub-communities of other participants who share similar preferences or interests. Nevertheless, protecting participants’ privacy in recommendation services is a quite crucial aspect which might prevent participants from exchanging their own data with these services, which in turn detain the accuracy of the generated referrals. So in order to gain accurate referrals, recommendation services should have the ability to discover previously unknown sub-communities from different social groups in a way to preserve privacy of participants in each group. In this paper, we present a middleware that runs on end-users’ mobile phones to sanitize their profiles’ data when released for generating referrals, such that computation of referrals continues over the sanitized version of their profiles’ data. The proposed middleware is equipped with cryptography protocols to facilitate private discovery of sub-communities from the sanitized version of participants’ profiles in a university scenario. Location data are added to participants’ profiles to improve the awareness of surrounding sub-communities, so the offered referrals can be filtered based on adjacent locations for participant’s location. We performed a number of different experiments to test the efficiency and accuracy of our protocols. We also developed a formal model for the tradeoff between privacy level and accuracy of referrals. As supported by the experiments, the sub-communities were correctly identified with good accuracy and an acceptable privacy level.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1007/s11227-015-1574-x
The Journal of Supercomputing
Keywords
Field
DocType
Privacy,Clustering,Community recommendations,Middleware,Secure multiparty communication
Social group,Middleware,World Wide Web,Internet privacy,Cryptography protocols,Social network,Excessive growth,Computer science,Privacy Level,Location data,Cluster analysis,Distributed computing
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
72
1
1573-0484
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
6
0.43
24
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Ahmed M. Elmisery1819.06
Seungmin Rho244138.53
Dmitri Botvich354063.28