DIMACS/PORTIA Workshop on Privacy-Preserving Data Mining
March 15 - 16, 2004
DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ
- Organizers:
- Cynthia Dwork, Microsoft, dwork at microsoft.com
- Benny Pinkas, HP Labs, benny.pinkas at hp.com
- Rebecca Wright, Stevens Institute of Technology, rwright at cs.stevens-tech.edu
Papers and Slides:
- Steven Bellovin, AT & T Research
Privacy-Enhanced Searches Using Encrypted Bloom Filters
- Shuchi Chawla, CMU
From Idiosyncratic to Stereotypical: Toward Privacy in Public Databases
- Kevin Du, Syracuse Unversity
When does the randomization fail to protect privacy? (pdf file)
When does the randomization fail to protect privacy? (ppt file)
- Kevin Du, Syracuse Unversity
Hillol Karagupta, University of Maryland
Poorvi Vora, George Washington Unversity
Some open questions: aggregation and privacy protection
Coding, information theory and signal processing
- Petros Drineas, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Computing sketches of matrices efficiently and privacy preserving data mining
- Mike Freedman, NYU
Efficient Private Matching and Set Intersection
- Yuval Ishai, Technion
Extending Oblivious Transfers Efficiently (pdf file)
Extending Oblivious Transfers Efficiently (ppt file)
- Eyal Kushilevitz, Technion
Amortized PIR via Batch Codes
- Yehuda Lindell, IBM
Open Questions & Research Areas in Privacy-Preserving Data Mining
- Helen Nissenbaum, NYU
Privacy as Contextual Integrity
- Emmanuel Pontikakis, University of Patras
An Experimental Study of Association Rule Hiding Technique
- Poorvi Vora, George Washington Unversity
A Model for Data Revelation
- Tal Zarsky, Yale Law School
Data Mining and Information Privacy - New Problems and the Search For Solutions (pdf file)
Data Mining and Information Privacy - New Problems and the Search For Solutions (ppt file)
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Document last modified on March 11, 2004.