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Privacy and Anonymity in Information Management Systems

New Techniques for New Practical Problems

  • Book
  • © 2010

Overview

  • A snapshot of the research that privacy researchers are currently carrying out
  • A book that can be considered as an actual baseline of privacy and anonymity research
  • The different profiles of the two editors bring the areas of theoretical cryptography and privacy in real life closer
  • A combination of theory and practice; that wills erve as a bridge between rsearchers in cryptography and researchers in other, more aplied, topics such as statistical/medical databases

Part of the book series: Advanced Information and Knowledge Processing (AI&KP)

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

  1. Overview

  2. Preserving Privacy in Distributed Applications

Keywords

About this book

As depicted in David Lodge’s celebrated novel Small World, the perceived size of our world experienced a progressive decrease as jet airplanes became affordable to ever greater shares of the earth’s population. Yet, the really dramatic shrinking had to wait until the mid-1990s, when Internet became widespread and the information age stopped being an empty buzzword. But small is not necessarily beautiful. We now live in a global village and, alas, some (often very powerful) voices state that we ought not expect any more privacy in it. Should this be true, we would have created our own nightmare: a global village combining the worst of conventional villages, where a lot of information on an individual is known by the other villagers, and conventional big cities, where the invidual feels lost in a grim and potentially dangerous place. Whereas security is essential for organizations to survive, individuals and so- times even companies also need some privacy to develop comfortably and lead a free life. This is the reason why individual privacy is mentioned in the Univ- sal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and data privacy is protected by law in most Western countries. Indeed, without privacy, the rest of fundamental rights, like freedom of speech and democracy, are impaired. The outstanding challenge is to create technology that implements those legal guarantees in a way compatible with functionality and security. This book edited by Dr. Javier Herranz and Dr.

Reviews

From the reviews:

“This collection of nine inviting chapters discusses current materials concerned with privacy-preserving data management, statistical disclosure control (how to generate statistics without identifying individuals), and application privacy in actions such as data mining and social networks. Advanced students, data managers, privacy experts, and computer scientists will generally find something useful in these materials. … this collection does provide a useful introduction to this important topic.” (Brad Reid, ACM Computing Reviews, May, 2011)

Editors and Affiliations

  • Dept. Arquitectura de Computadors, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain

    Jordi Nin

  • Dept. Matematica Aplicada IV, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain

    Javier Herranz

About the editors

Jordi Nin (Barcelona, Catalonia, 1979; BSc 2004, MSc 2007, PhD 2008 all in Computer Science) is a post-doctoral researcher at the Artificial Intelligence Research Institute (IIIA-CSIC) near Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. His fields of interest are privacy technologies, machine learning and soft computing tools. He has been involved in several research projects funded by the Catalan and Spanish governments and the European Community. His research has been published in specialized journals and major conferences (around 30 papers). Javier Herranz obtained his PhD in Applied Mathematics in 2005, in the Technial University of Catalonia (UPC, Barcelona, Spain). After that he spent 9 months in the Ecole Polytechnique (France) and 9 months in the Centrum voor Wiskunde en Informatica (CWI, The Netherlands), as a post-doctoral researcher, granted with an ERCIM fellowship. From January 2007, he works as a post-doctoral researcher at IIIA-CSIC (Bellaterra, Spain). His research interests include the design and analysis of cryptographic protols and the study of privacy preserving operations involving databases.

Bibliographic Information

  • Book Title: Privacy and Anonymity in Information Management Systems

  • Book Subtitle: New Techniques for New Practical Problems

  • Editors: Jordi Nin, Javier Herranz

  • Series Title: Advanced Information and Knowledge Processing

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-84996-238-4

  • Publisher: Springer London

  • eBook Packages: Computer Science, Computer Science (R0)

  • Copyright Information: Springer-Verlag London Limited 2010

  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-84996-237-7Published: 02 August 2010

  • Softcover ISBN: 978-1-4471-2579-2Published: 13 October 2012

  • eBook ISBN: 978-1-84996-238-4Published: 16 July 2010

  • Series ISSN: 1610-3947

  • Series E-ISSN: 2197-8441

  • Edition Number: 1

  • Number of Pages: XIV, 198

  • Topics: Systems and Data Security

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