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Ocena ryzyka ujawnienia×k-Anonimowość: Ochrona prywatności jednostki w udostępnianych danych×Generowanie danych syntetycznych na potrzeby kontroli ujawnień×
DziedzinaPrywatnośćPrywatnośćPrywatność
RodzinaRegression modelMachine learningMachine learning
Rok powstania198920021993
TwórcaGeorge Duncan & Diane LambertLatanya SweeneyDonald Rubin
TypProbabilistic risk modelPrivacy-preserving data transformationPrivacy-preserving data synthesis
Źródło pierwotneDuncan, G. T., & Lambert, D. (1989). The risk of disclosure for microdata. Journal of Business & Economic Statistics, 7(2), 207–217. DOI ↗Sweeney, L. (2002). k-anonymity: A model for protecting privacy. International Journal of Uncertainty, Fuzziness and Knowledge-Based Systems, 10(5), 557–570. DOI ↗Rubin, D. B. (1993). Statistical disclosure limitation. Journal of Official Statistics, 9(2), 461–468. link ↗
Inne nazwyMicrodata Disclosure Risk, Statistical Disclosure Control Risk Estimation, Istatistiksel Açıklama Riski Değerlendirmesi, Re-identification Risk Assessmentk-Anonymization, k-Anonymous Microdata, Quasi-Identifier Suppression Model, k-AnonimlikFully Synthetic Data, Partial Synthetic Data, Statistical Data Synthesis, Sentetik Veri Üretimi
Pokrewne323
PodsumowanieDisclosure Risk Assessment is a probabilistic framework introduced by Duncan and Lambert (1989) for quantifying how likely it is that releasing microdata — individual-level records from surveys or administrative files — will allow an outside party to identify a specific respondent or infer sensitive attributes. It is used by statistical agencies, data custodians, and researchers charged with protecting confidentiality before any public release of person-level datasets.k-Anonymity is a formal privacy model introduced by Latanya Sweeney in 2002 to protect individuals when personal data is released for research or public use. It requires that every record in a published dataset be indistinguishable from at least k−1 other records with respect to a designated set of quasi-identifying attributes — such as age, gender, and ZIP code — preventing re-identification by linking released data to external sources.Synthetic data generation is a statistical disclosure limitation technique introduced by Donald Rubin in 1993, in which values in a confidential dataset are replaced by draws from a fitted posterior predictive distribution rather than released directly. The resulting artificial records preserve the joint statistical structure of the original data while preventing the identification of real individuals, enabling analysts to work with a publicly releasable dataset that behaves like the original for most inferential purposes.
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