Abstract

Location-Based Services (LBS) System is rapidly growing due to radio communication services with wireless mobile devices having a positioning component in it. LBS System offers location-based services by knowing the actual user position. A mobile user uses LBS to access services relevant to their locations. In order to provide Point of Interest (POI), LBS confronts numerous privacy related challenges in three different formats including Non-Trusted Third Party (NTTP), Trusted Third Party (TTP), and Mobile Peer-to-Peer (P2P). The current study emphasized the TTP based LBS system where the Location server does not provide full privacy to mobile users. In TTP based LBS system, a user’s privacy is concerned with personal identity, location information, and time information. In order to accomplish privacy under these concerns, state-of-the-art existing mechanisms have been reviewed. Hence, the aim to provide a promising roadmap to research and development communities for the right selection of privacy approach has achieved by conducting a comparative survey of the TTP based approaches. Leading to these privacy attributes, the current study addressed the privacy challenge by proposing a new privacy protection model named “Improved Dummy Position” (IDP) that protects TIP (Time, Identity, and Position) attributes under TTP LBS System. In order to validate the privacy level, a comparative analysis has been conducted by implementing the proposed IDP model in the simulation tool, Riverbed Modeler academic edition. The different scenarios of changing query transferring rate evaluate the performance of the proposed model. Simulation results demonstrate that our IDP could be considered as a promising model to protect user’s TIP attributes in a TTP based LBS system due to better performance and improved privacy level. Further, the proposed model extensively compared with the existing work.

Highlights

  • In recent years, location-based services (LBS) gaining popularity due to the rapid advancement of mobile phones, wireless communication, and positioning systems among users [1]

  • We propose an Improved Dummy Position (IDP) System model for Trusted Third Party (TTP) based LBS system by extending the base Dummy Position technique, which resolves the privacy problems of the user regarding the disclosure of personal information

  • The privacy of user identity means that a malicious party has access to a location database that contains the actual location of each user but is unable to infer the information about the user from the record because the user is hidden from these untrusted parties

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Summary

Introduction

Location-based services (LBS) gaining popularity due to the rapid advancement of mobile phones, wireless communication, and positioning systems among users [1]. It can be used to trace the nearest cinema, restaurant, hospital, or desired destination from your location according to the shortest route Some examples of such requests include points of interest (POI) queries, for example, “Which Chinese food restaurant is near to my current location?” queries of real-time traffic, “How swarming is the way from my house to my office?” [2], and data processing over Fog [63], cloud [64]. The essential origin of the LBS system was the Enhanced E911 authorization, passed in 1996 by the government of the U.S [29] This authorization for operators of the mobile network distinguish emergency callers with efficiency, so the location of the caller is distributing to public safety answering points. Many users have not to seem involved in this type of LBS system that is why most operators immediately abolish their LBS contributions and cancelled relevant evolution attempts [30]

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