Abstract

In this work we investigate the problem of private statistical analysis of time-series data in the distributed and semi-honest setting. In particular, we study some properties of Private Stream Aggregation (PSA), first introduced by Shi et al. 2011. This is a computationally secure protocol for the collection and aggregation of data in a distributed network and has a very small communication cost. In the non-adaptive query model, a secure PSA scheme can be built upon any key-homomorphic weak pseudo-random function as shown by Valovich 2017, yielding security guarantees in the standard model which is in contrast to Shi et al. We show that every mechanism which preserves \((\epsilon ,\delta )\)-differential privacy in effect preserves computational \((\epsilon ,\delta )\)-differential privacy when it is executed through a secure PSA scheme. Furthermore, we introduce a novel perturbation mechanism based on the symmetric Skellam distribution that is suited for preserving differential privacy in the distributed setting, and find that its performances in terms of privacy and accuracy are comparable to those of previous solutions. On the other hand, we leverage its specific properties to construct a computationally efficient prospective post-quantum protocol for differentially private time-series data analysis in the distributed model. The security of this protocol is based on the hardness of a new variant of the Decisional Learning with Errors (DLWE) problem. In this variant the errors are taken from the symmetric Skellam distribution. We show that this new variant is hard based on the hardness of the standard Learning with Errors (LWE) problem where the errors are taken from the discrete Gaussian distribution. Thus, we provide a variant of the LWE problem that is hard based on conjecturally hard lattice problems and uses a discrete error distribution that is similar to the continuous Gaussian distribution in that it is closed under convolution. A consequent feature of the constructed prospective post-quantum protocol is the use of the same noise for security and for differential privacy.

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