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Auteurs principaux: Kuili, Samhita, Dabbour, Kareem, Hasan, Irtiza, Herscovich, Andrea, Kantarci, Burak, Chenier, Marcel, Erol-Kantarci, Melike
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2024
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.01542
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author Kuili, Samhita
Dabbour, Kareem
Hasan, Irtiza
Herscovich, Andrea
Kantarci, Burak
Chenier, Marcel
Erol-Kantarci, Melike
author_facet Kuili, Samhita
Dabbour, Kareem
Hasan, Irtiza
Herscovich, Andrea
Kantarci, Burak
Chenier, Marcel
Erol-Kantarci, Melike
contents Data privacy and protection through anonymization is a critical issue for network operators or data owners before it is forwarded for other possible use of data. With the adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI), data anonymization augments the likelihood of covering up necessary sensitive information; preventing data leakage and information loss. OpenWiFi networks are vulnerable to any adversary who is trying to gain access or knowledge on traffic regardless of the knowledge possessed by data owners. The odds for discovery of actual traffic information is addressed by applied conditional tabular generative adversarial network (CTGAN). CTGAN yields synthetic data; which disguises as actual data but fostering hidden acute information of actual data. In this paper, the similarity assessment of synthetic with actual data is showcased in terms of clustering algorithms followed by a comparison of performance for unsupervised cluster validation metrics. A well-known algorithm, K-means outperforms other algorithms in terms of similarity assessment of synthetic data over real data while achieving nearest scores 0.634, 23714.57, and 0.598 as Silhouette, Calinski and Harabasz and Davies Bouldin metric respectively. On exploiting a comparative analysis in validation scores among several algorithms, K-means forms the epitome of unsupervised clustering algorithms ensuring explicit usage of synthetic data at the same time a replacement for real data. Hence, the experimental results aim to show the viability of using CTGAN-generated synthetic data in lieu of publishing anonymized data to be utilized in various applications.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2401_01542
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Adversarial Machine Learning-Enabled Anonymization of OpenWiFi Data
Kuili, Samhita
Dabbour, Kareem
Hasan, Irtiza
Herscovich, Andrea
Kantarci, Burak
Chenier, Marcel
Erol-Kantarci, Melike
Networking and Internet Architecture
Artificial Intelligence
Data privacy and protection through anonymization is a critical issue for network operators or data owners before it is forwarded for other possible use of data. With the adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI), data anonymization augments the likelihood of covering up necessary sensitive information; preventing data leakage and information loss. OpenWiFi networks are vulnerable to any adversary who is trying to gain access or knowledge on traffic regardless of the knowledge possessed by data owners. The odds for discovery of actual traffic information is addressed by applied conditional tabular generative adversarial network (CTGAN). CTGAN yields synthetic data; which disguises as actual data but fostering hidden acute information of actual data. In this paper, the similarity assessment of synthetic with actual data is showcased in terms of clustering algorithms followed by a comparison of performance for unsupervised cluster validation metrics. A well-known algorithm, K-means outperforms other algorithms in terms of similarity assessment of synthetic data over real data while achieving nearest scores 0.634, 23714.57, and 0.598 as Silhouette, Calinski and Harabasz and Davies Bouldin metric respectively. On exploiting a comparative analysis in validation scores among several algorithms, K-means forms the epitome of unsupervised clustering algorithms ensuring explicit usage of synthetic data at the same time a replacement for real data. Hence, the experimental results aim to show the viability of using CTGAN-generated synthetic data in lieu of publishing anonymized data to be utilized in various applications.
title Adversarial Machine Learning-Enabled Anonymization of OpenWiFi Data
topic Networking and Internet Architecture
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.01542