HPRoP: Hierarchical Privacy-Preserving Route Planning for Smart Cities
Francis Tiausas, Keiichi Yasumoto, Jose Paolo Talusan, Hayato Yamana, Hirozumi Yamaguchi, Shameek Bhattacharjee, Abhishek Dubey, Sajal K. Das- Artificial Intelligence
- Control and Optimization
- Computer Networks and Communications
- Hardware and Architecture
- Human-Computer Interaction
Route Planning Systems (RPS) are a core component of autonomous personal transport systems essential for safe and efficient navigation of dynamic urban environments with the support of edge-based smart city infrastructure, but they also raise concerns about user route privacy in the context of both privately-owned and commercial vehicles. Numerous high profile data breaches in recent years have fortunately motivated research on privacy-preserving RPS, but most of them are rendered impractical by greatly increased communication and processing overhead. We address this by proposing an approach called Hierarchical Privacy-Preserving Route Planning (HPRoP) which divides and distributes the route planning task across multiple levels, and protects locations along the entire route. This is done by combining Inertial Flow partitioning, Private Information Retrieval (PIR), and Edge Computing techniques with our novel route planning heuristic algorithm. Normalized metrics were also formulated to quantify the privacy of the source/destination points (
endpoint location privacy
) and the route itself (
route privacy
). Evaluation on a simulated road network showed that HPRoP reliably produces routes differing only by