Abstract

To obtain reliable results from conflicting data in mobile crowdsensing, numerous truth discovery protocols have been proposed in the past decade. However, most of them do not consider the data privacy of entities involved (e.g., workers and servers), and several existing privacy-preserving truth discovery protocols either provide limited privacy protection or have heavy computation and communication overheads due to iterative computation and transmission over large ciphertexts. In this paper, we aim to propose privacy-preserving and lightweight truth discovery protocols to tackle the above problems. Specifically, we carefully design an anonymization protocol named AnonymTD to delink workers from their data, where workers’ data are computed and transmitted without complicated encryption. To further reduce each worker's overheads in the scenarios where workers are willing to share their weights, we resort to the perturbation technology to propose a more lightweight truth discovery protocol named PerturbTD. Based on workers’ perturbed data, two cloud servers in PerturbTD complete most of the workload of truth discovery together, which avoids the frequent involvement of workers. The theoretical analysis and the comparative experiments in this paper demonstrate that our two protocols can achieve our security goals with low computation and communication overheads.

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