Quantifying the Privacy-Utility Trade-offs in COVID-19 Contact Tracing Apps

24 Dec 2020  ·  Patrick Ocheja, Yang Cao, Shiyao Ding, Masatoshi Yoshikawa ·

How to contain the spread of the COVID-19 virus is a major concern for most countries. As the situation continues to change, various countries are making efforts to reopen their economies by lifting some restrictions and enforcing new measures to prevent the spread. In this work, we review some approaches that have been adopted to contain the COVID-19 virus such as contact tracing, clusters identification, movement restrictions, and status validation. Specifically, we classify available techniques based on some characteristics such as technology, architecture, trade-offs (privacy vs utility), and the phase of adoption. We present a novel approach for evaluating privacy using both qualitative and quantitative measures of privacy-utility assessment of contact tracing applications. In this new method, we classify utility at three (3) distinct levels: no privacy, 100% privacy, and at k where k is set by the system providing the utility or privacy.

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Computers and Society Cryptography and Security 68P27 H.3.4

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