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Creators/Authors contains: "Laud, Peeter"

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  1. Owners of data may wish to share some statistics with others, but they may be worried of privacy of the underlying data. An effective solution to this problem is to employ provable privacy techniques, such as differential privacy, to add noise to the statistics before releasing them. This protection lowers the risk of sharing sensitive data with more or less trusted data sharing partners. Unfortunately, applying differential privacy in its mathematical form requires one to fix certain numeric parameters, which involves subtle computations and expert knowledge that the data owners may lack.In this paper, we first describe a differential privacy parameter selection procedure that minimizes what lay data owners need to know. Second, we describe a user visualization and workflow that makes this procedure available for lay data owners by helping them set the level of noise appropriately to achieve a tolerable risk level. Finally, we describe a user study in which human factors professionals who were native to differential privacy were briefly trained on the concept of using differential privacy for data sharing and then used the visualization to determine an appropriate level of noise. 
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