Prospects for Protecting Business Microdata when Releasing Population Totals via a Remote Server

Many statistical agencies face the challenge of maintaining the confidentiality of respondents while providing as much analytical value as possible from their data. Datasets relating to businesses present particular difficulties because they are likely to contain information about large enterprises...

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Main Authors: Chipperfield James, Newman John, Thompson Gwenda, Ma Yue, Lin Yan-Xia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-06-01
Series:Journal of Official Statistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/jos-2019-0015
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spelling doaj-bdb6c098263b47f188a73a0dc1f8344e2021-09-06T19:41:47ZengSciendoJournal of Official Statistics2001-73672019-06-0135231933610.2478/jos-2019-0015jos-2019-0015Prospects for Protecting Business Microdata when Releasing Population Totals via a Remote ServerChipperfield James0Newman John1Thompson Gwenda2Ma Yue3Lin Yan-Xia4Australian Bureau of Statistics, P.O. Box 10, Belconnen, Australian Capital Territory 2616, Australia.Australian Bureau of Statistics, P.O. Box 10, Belconnen, Australian Capital Territory 2616, Australia.Australian Bureau of Statistics, P.O. Box 10, Belconnen, Australian Capital Territory 2616, Australia.University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales 2522, Australia.University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales 2522, Australia.Many statistical agencies face the challenge of maintaining the confidentiality of respondents while providing as much analytical value as possible from their data. Datasets relating to businesses present particular difficulties because they are likely to contain information about large enterprises that dominate industries and may be more easily identified. Agencies therefore tend to take a cautious approach to releasing business data (e.g., trusted access, remote access and synthetic data). The Australian Bureau of Statistics has developed a remote server, called TableBuilder, which has the capability to allow users to specify and request tables created from business microdata. The tables are confidentialised automatically by perturbing cell values, and the results are returned quickly to the users. The perturbation method is designed to protect against attacks, which are attempts to undo the confidentialisation, such as the well-known differencing attack. This paper considers the risk and utility trade-off when releasing three Australian Bureau of Statistics business collections via its TableBuilder product.https://doi.org/10.2478/jos-2019-0015business dataonline accessperturbationremote serverstatistical disclosure control
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chipperfield James
Newman John
Thompson Gwenda
Ma Yue
Lin Yan-Xia
spellingShingle Chipperfield James
Newman John
Thompson Gwenda
Ma Yue
Lin Yan-Xia
Prospects for Protecting Business Microdata when Releasing Population Totals via a Remote Server
Journal of Official Statistics
business data
online access
perturbation
remote server
statistical disclosure control
author_facet Chipperfield James
Newman John
Thompson Gwenda
Ma Yue
Lin Yan-Xia
author_sort Chipperfield James
title Prospects for Protecting Business Microdata when Releasing Population Totals via a Remote Server
title_short Prospects for Protecting Business Microdata when Releasing Population Totals via a Remote Server
title_full Prospects for Protecting Business Microdata when Releasing Population Totals via a Remote Server
title_fullStr Prospects for Protecting Business Microdata when Releasing Population Totals via a Remote Server
title_full_unstemmed Prospects for Protecting Business Microdata when Releasing Population Totals via a Remote Server
title_sort prospects for protecting business microdata when releasing population totals via a remote server
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Official Statistics
issn 2001-7367
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Many statistical agencies face the challenge of maintaining the confidentiality of respondents while providing as much analytical value as possible from their data. Datasets relating to businesses present particular difficulties because they are likely to contain information about large enterprises that dominate industries and may be more easily identified. Agencies therefore tend to take a cautious approach to releasing business data (e.g., trusted access, remote access and synthetic data). The Australian Bureau of Statistics has developed a remote server, called TableBuilder, which has the capability to allow users to specify and request tables created from business microdata. The tables are confidentialised automatically by perturbing cell values, and the results are returned quickly to the users. The perturbation method is designed to protect against attacks, which are attempts to undo the confidentialisation, such as the well-known differencing attack. This paper considers the risk and utility trade-off when releasing three Australian Bureau of Statistics business collections via its TableBuilder product.
topic business data
online access
perturbation
remote server
statistical disclosure control
url https://doi.org/10.2478/jos-2019-0015
work_keys_str_mv AT chipperfieldjames prospectsforprotectingbusinessmicrodatawhenreleasingpopulationtotalsviaaremoteserver
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AT mayue prospectsforprotectingbusinessmicrodatawhenreleasingpopulationtotalsviaaremoteserver
AT linyanxia prospectsforprotectingbusinessmicrodatawhenreleasingpopulationtotalsviaaremoteserver
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