posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00authored byKaren P. Tang, Pedram Keyani, James Fogarty, Jason I. Hong
and compelling applications, but raises very real privacy
risks. Existing approaches to privacy generally treat people
as the entity of interest, often using a fidelity tradeoff to
manage the costs and benefits of revealing a person’s
location. However, these approaches cannot be applied in
some applications, as a reduction in precision can render
location information useless. This is true of a category of
applications that use location data collected from multiple
people to infer such information as whether there is a traffic
jam on a bridge, whether there are seats available in a
nearby coffee shop, when the next bus will arrive, or if a
particular conference room is currently empty. We present
hitchhiking, a new approach that treats locations as the
primary entity of interest. Hitchhiking removes the fidelity
tradeoff by preserving the anonymity of reports without
reducing the precision of location disclosures. We can
therefore support the full functionality of an interesting
class of location-based applications without introducing the
privacy concerns that would otherwise arise.