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Pan-private Algorithms: When Memory Does Not Help

Consider updates arriving online in which the $t$th input is $(i_t,d_t)$, where $i_t$'s are thought of as IDs of users. Informally, a randomized function $f$ is {\em differentially private} with respect to the IDs if the probability distribution induced by $f$ is not much different from that induced by it on an input in which occurrences of an ID $j$ are replaced with some other ID $k$ Recently, this notion was extended to {\em pan-privacy} where the computation of $f$ retains differential privacy, even if the internal memory of the algorithm is exposed to the adversary (say by a malicious break-in or by fiat by the government). This is a strong notion of privacy, and surprisingly, for basic counting tasks such as distinct counts, heavy hitters and others, Dwork et al~\cite{dwork-pan} present pan-private algorithms with reasonable accuracy. The pan-private algorithms are nontrivial, and rely on sampling. We reexamine these basic counting tasks and show improved bounds. In particular, we estimate the distinct count $\Dt$ to within $(1\pm \eps)\Dt \pm O(\polylog m)$, where $m$ is the number of elements in the universe. This uses suitably noisy statistics on sketches known in the streaming literature. We also present the first known lower bounds for pan-privacy with respect to a single intrusion. Our lower bounds show that, even if allowed to work with unbounded memory, pan-private algorithms for distinct counts can not be significantly more accurate than our algorithms. Our lower bound uses noisy decoding. For heavy hitter counts, we present a pan private streaming algorithm that is accurate to within $O(k)$ in worst case; previously known bound for this problem is arbitrarily worse. An interesting aspect of our pan-private algorithms is that, they deliberately use very small (polylogarithmic) space and tend to be streaming algorithms, even though using more space is not forbidden.

preprint2010arXivOpen access
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