Abstract

The Internet of Things (IoT) envisions a huge number of networked sensors connected to the internet. These sensors collect large streams of data which serve as input to wide range of IoT applications and services such as e-health, e-commerce, and automotive services. Complex Event Processing (CEP) is a powerful tool that transforms streams of raw sensor data into meaningful information required by these IoT services. Often these streams of data collected by sensors carry privacy-sensitive information about the user. Thus, protecting privacy is of paramount importance in IoT services based on CEP.In this paper we present a novel pattern-level access control mechanism for CEP based services that conceals private information while minimizing the impact on useful non-sensitive information required by the services to provide a certain quality of service (QoS). The idea is to reorder events from the event stream to conceal privacy-sensitive event patterns while preserving non-privacy sensitive event patterns to maximize QoS. We propose two approaches, namely an ILP-based approach and a graph-based approach, calculating an optimal reordering of events. Our evaluation results show that these approaches are effective in concealing private patterns without significant loss of QoS.

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