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Articles

The Price of Privacy Control in Mobility Sharing

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Pages 237-262 | Published online: 17 Sep 2020
 

ABSTRACT

One of the main features in mobility sharing applications is the exposure of personal data provided to the system. Transportation and location data can reveal personal habits, preferences, and behaviors, and riders could be keen not to share the exact location of their origin and/or destination. But what is the price of privacy in terms of decreased efficiency of a mobility sharing system? In this paper we address the privacy issues under this point of view, and show how location privacy-preserving techniques could affect the performance of mobility-sharing applications, in terms of both system efficiency and quality of service. To this extent, we first apply different data-masking techniques to anonymize geographical information, and then compare the performance of shareability network-based trip-matching algorithms for ride-sharing, applied to real data and to privacy-preserving data. The goal of the paper is to evaluate the performance of mobility-sharing, privacy-preserving systems, and to shed light on the trade-off between data privacy and its costs. The results show that the total traveled distance increase due to the introduction of data privacy could be bounded if users are willing to spend (or “pay”) for more time in order to share a trip, meaning that data location privacy affects both efficiency and quality of service.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank the whole MIT JTL Mobility Lab members for their valuable comments and suggestions.

Additional information

Funding

This work was partially supported by the MIT Energy Initiative’s Mobility Systems Center.

Notes on contributors

Francesca Martelli

F. Martelli is a researcher at the Institute of Informatics and Telematics (IIT – CNR) in Pisa, Italy.

M. Elena Renda

M. E. Renda is a visiting research scientist within Department of Urban Studies and Planning at MIT in Cambridge, US, and a Researcher at Istituto di Informatica e Telematica of the National Research Council (IIT – CNR) in Pisa, Italy.

Jinhua Zhao

Jinhua Zhao is an associate professor of city and transportation planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He also directs MIT's http://mobility.mit.edu/ JTL Urban Mobility Lab and its Transit Lab. He co-directs the Mobility Systems Center of the MIT Energy Initiative.

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