Local Pan-Privacy for Federated Analytics
AuthorsVitaly Feldman, Audra McMillan, Guy N. Rothblum, Kunal Talwar
AuthorsVitaly Feldman, Audra McMillan, Guy N. Rothblum, Kunal Talwar
Pan-privacy was proposed by Dwork et al. (2010) as an approach to designing a private analytics system that retains its privacy properties in the face of intrusions that expose the system's internal state. Motivated by federated telemetry applications, we study local pan-privacy, where privacy should be retained under repeated unannounced intrusions on the local state. We consider the problem of monitoring the count of an event in a federated system, where event occurrences on a local device should be hidden even from an intruder on that device. We show that under reasonable constraints, the goal of providing information-theoretic differential privacy under intrusion is incompatible with collecting telemetry information. We then show that this problem can be solved in a scalable way using standard cryptographic primitives.
Earlier this year, Apple hosted the Privacy-Preserving Machine Learning (PPML) workshop. This virtual event brought Apple and members of the academic research communities together to discuss the state of the art in the field of privacy-preserving machine learning through a series of talks and discussions over two days.
September 21, 2021research area Privacyconference IEEE BITS the Information Theory Magazine