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Autori principali: Guerra-Balboa, Patricia, Sauer, Annika, Arcolezi, Héber H., Strufe, Thorsten
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12142
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author Guerra-Balboa, Patricia
Sauer, Annika
Arcolezi, Héber H.
Strufe, Thorsten
author_facet Guerra-Balboa, Patricia
Sauer, Annika
Arcolezi, Héber H.
Strufe, Thorsten
contents Differential Privacy (DP) is widely adopted in data management systems to enable data sharing with formal disclosure guarantees. A central systems challenge is understanding how DP noise translates into effective protection against inference attacks, since this directly determines achievable utility. Most existing analyses focus only on membership inference -- capturing only a threat -- or rely on reconstruction robustness (ReRo). However, under realistic assumptions, we show that ReRo can yield misleading risk estimates and violate claimed bounds, limiting their usefulness for principled DP calibration and auditing. This paper introduces reconstruction advantage, a unified risk metric that consistently captures risk across membership inference, attribute inference, and data reconstruction. We derive tight bounds that relate DP noise to adversarial advantage and characterize optimal adversarial strategies for arbitrary DP mechanisms and attacker knowledge. These results enable risk-driven noise calibration and provide a foundation for systematic DP auditing. We show that reconstruction advantage improves the accuracy and scope of DP auditing and enables more effective utility-privacy trade-offs in DP-enabled data management systems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_12142
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Understanding Disclosure Risk in Differential Privacy with Applications to Noise Calibration and Auditing (Extended Version)
Guerra-Balboa, Patricia
Sauer, Annika
Arcolezi, Héber H.
Strufe, Thorsten
Cryptography and Security
Information Theory
68P27
Differential Privacy (DP) is widely adopted in data management systems to enable data sharing with formal disclosure guarantees. A central systems challenge is understanding how DP noise translates into effective protection against inference attacks, since this directly determines achievable utility. Most existing analyses focus only on membership inference -- capturing only a threat -- or rely on reconstruction robustness (ReRo). However, under realistic assumptions, we show that ReRo can yield misleading risk estimates and violate claimed bounds, limiting their usefulness for principled DP calibration and auditing. This paper introduces reconstruction advantage, a unified risk metric that consistently captures risk across membership inference, attribute inference, and data reconstruction. We derive tight bounds that relate DP noise to adversarial advantage and characterize optimal adversarial strategies for arbitrary DP mechanisms and attacker knowledge. These results enable risk-driven noise calibration and provide a foundation for systematic DP auditing. We show that reconstruction advantage improves the accuracy and scope of DP auditing and enables more effective utility-privacy trade-offs in DP-enabled data management systems.
title Understanding Disclosure Risk in Differential Privacy with Applications to Noise Calibration and Auditing (Extended Version)
topic Cryptography and Security
Information Theory
68P27
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12142