Abstract

Protection against disclosure is a legal and ethical obligation for agencies releasing microdata files for public use. Consider a microdata sample of size n from a finite population of size n¯=n+λn, with λ>0, such that each sample record contains two disjoint types of information: identifying categorical information and sensitive information. Any decision about releasing data is supported by the estimation of measures of disclosure risk, which are defined as discrete functionals of the number of sample records with a unique combination of values of identifying variables. The most common measure is arguably the number τ1 of sample unique records that are population uniques. In this paper, we first study nonparametric estimation of τ1 under the Poisson abundance model for sample records. We introduce a class of linear estimators of τ1 that are simple, computationally efficient and scalable to massive datasets, and we give uniform theoretical guarantees for them. In particular, we show that they provably estimate τ1 all of the way up to the sampling fraction (λ+1)−1∝(logn)−1, with vanishing normalized mean-square error (NMSE) for large n. We then establish a lower bound for the minimax NMSE for the estimation of τ1, which allows us to show that: (i) (λ+1)−1∝(logn)−1 is the smallest possible sampling fraction for consistently estimating τ1; (ii) estimators’ NMSE is near optimal, in the sense of matching the minimax lower bound, for large n. This is the main result of our paper, and it provides a rigorous answer to an open question about the feasibility of nonparametric estimation of τ1 under the Poisson abundance model and for a sampling fraction (λ+1)−1<1/2.

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