Continual Counting with Gradual Privacy Expiration
Abstract
Differential privacy with gradual expiration models the setting where data items arrive in a stream and at a given time t the privacy loss guaranteed for a data item seen at time (t-d) is ε g(d), where g is a monotonically non-decreasing function. We study the fundamental continual (binary) counting problem where each data item consists of a bit, and the algorithm needs to output at each time step the sum of all the bits streamed so far. For a stream of length T and privacy without expiration continual counting is possible with maximum (over all time steps) additive error O(2(T)/) and the best known lower bound is ((T)/); closing this gap is a challenging open problem. We show that the situation is very different for privacy with gradual expiration by giving upper and lower bounds for a large set of expiration functions g. Specifically, our algorithm achieves an additive error of O((T)/ε) for a large set of privacy expiration functions. We also give a lower bound that shows that if C is the additive error of any ε-DP algorithm for this problem, then the product of C and the privacy expiration function after 2C steps must be ((T)/ε). Our algorithm matches this lower bound as its additive error is O((T)/ε), even when g(2C) = O(1). Our empirical evaluation shows that we achieve a slowly growing privacy loss with significantly smaller empirical privacy loss for large values of d than a natural baseline algorithm.
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