Privacy Preserved Mobile Sensing Using Region-Based Group Signature

Mobile sensing receives lots of attention since it exploits sensors embedded in smartphones to gather information for quality improvement of daily life. In particular, mobile users (MUs) carrying smartphones act as queriers who request information provided by MUs who act as data collectors, and the...

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Main Authors: Ya-Cheng Li, Shin-Ming Cheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2018-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8454447/
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spelling doaj-23ba8f2735004fc6a71d67f42691e6ab2021-03-29T21:21:37ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362018-01-016615566156810.1109/ACCESS.2018.28685028454447Privacy Preserved Mobile Sensing Using Region-Based Group SignatureYa-Cheng Li0Shin-Ming Cheng1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9796-0643Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Inf. Eng., Nat. Taiwan Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Taipei, TaiwanDepartment of Computer Science and Information Engineering, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Taipei, TaiwanMobile sensing receives lots of attention since it exploits sensors embedded in smartphones to gather information for quality improvement of daily life. In particular, mobile users (MUs) carrying smartphones act as queriers who request information provided by MUs who act as data collectors, and the data collection and delivery are facilitated by human mobility and ubiquity. However, additional privacy considerations rise in this paradigm, where MUs might not want to reveal their identities when providing some information at a specific position during a particular period. By adopting group signature, where any member of its group can sign a message on behalf of the entire group, the signer of the sensed information cannot be recognized, and thus, anonymity is preserved. The concept of group signature can be realized when introducing mobile edge computing, where base stations are clustered into a region to serve a group of MUs. In such region-based group signature, MUs located in the same region are grouped and thus are indistinguishable. Due to the localized movement feature of human, MUs might not frequently leave the current group and join a new group, which subsequently reduces the infamous rekeying overhead. We implement group signature on Android smartphones and conduct simulation experiments to investigate the performance of the proposed region-based grouping approach from the perspectives of rekeying overhead and delay. The simulation results show that the region-based grouping method is efficient. Moreover, the optimal group number for the minimization of rekeying overhead is suggested.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8454447/Anonymitygroup signaturelocation privacymobile sensingrekeying
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ya-Cheng Li
Shin-Ming Cheng
spellingShingle Ya-Cheng Li
Shin-Ming Cheng
Privacy Preserved Mobile Sensing Using Region-Based Group Signature
IEEE Access
Anonymity
group signature
location privacy
mobile sensing
rekeying
author_facet Ya-Cheng Li
Shin-Ming Cheng
author_sort Ya-Cheng Li
title Privacy Preserved Mobile Sensing Using Region-Based Group Signature
title_short Privacy Preserved Mobile Sensing Using Region-Based Group Signature
title_full Privacy Preserved Mobile Sensing Using Region-Based Group Signature
title_fullStr Privacy Preserved Mobile Sensing Using Region-Based Group Signature
title_full_unstemmed Privacy Preserved Mobile Sensing Using Region-Based Group Signature
title_sort privacy preserved mobile sensing using region-based group signature
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Mobile sensing receives lots of attention since it exploits sensors embedded in smartphones to gather information for quality improvement of daily life. In particular, mobile users (MUs) carrying smartphones act as queriers who request information provided by MUs who act as data collectors, and the data collection and delivery are facilitated by human mobility and ubiquity. However, additional privacy considerations rise in this paradigm, where MUs might not want to reveal their identities when providing some information at a specific position during a particular period. By adopting group signature, where any member of its group can sign a message on behalf of the entire group, the signer of the sensed information cannot be recognized, and thus, anonymity is preserved. The concept of group signature can be realized when introducing mobile edge computing, where base stations are clustered into a region to serve a group of MUs. In such region-based group signature, MUs located in the same region are grouped and thus are indistinguishable. Due to the localized movement feature of human, MUs might not frequently leave the current group and join a new group, which subsequently reduces the infamous rekeying overhead. We implement group signature on Android smartphones and conduct simulation experiments to investigate the performance of the proposed region-based grouping approach from the perspectives of rekeying overhead and delay. The simulation results show that the region-based grouping method is efficient. Moreover, the optimal group number for the minimization of rekeying overhead is suggested.
topic Anonymity
group signature
location privacy
mobile sensing
rekeying
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8454447/
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