DocumentCode
1467275
Title
Preserving Privacy Based on Semantic Policy Tools
Author
Kagal, Lalana ; Pato, Joseph
Author_Institution
Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume
8
Issue
4
fYear
2010
Firstpage
25
Lastpage
30
Abstract
Different organizations are constantly collecting, analyzing, and storing individuals\´ private data: shopping sites want to provide better service and recommendations, hospitals to improve healthcare, and government agencies to enable national defense and law enforcement. Sharing data lets these organizations discover important knowledge and draw useful conclusions but raises concerns about information privacy and trust. Until recently, the focus was on restricting access to data on a "need-to-know" basis, but since the 9/11 Commission, the paradigm has shifted to a "need to share." The authors explore the use of semantic privacy policies, justifications for data requests, and automated auditing to encourage sharing of sensitive data between organizations. They describe an architecture based on policy tools that evaluate incoming queries against semantic policies and domain knowledge and provide a justification for each query-why they\´re permitted, denied, or inapplicable. Using a semantic policy language gives policies explicit semantics that allow all participants to unambiguously understand their meaning. The justifications generated by checking incoming requests against these policies help requesters formulate privacy-aware queries. Reasoning over event logs and justifications allows data owners to verify that their privacy policies are being correctly enforced.
Keywords
data privacy; public administration; query formulation; domain knowledge; information privacy; privacy aware query formulation; semantic policy language; sensitive data sharing; justifications; privacy policy; proofs; sharing; trust;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Security & Privacy, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1540-7993
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSP.2010.89
Filename
5445077
Link To Document