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Personal mobile devices are increasingly equipped with the capability to sense the physical world (through cameras, microphones, and accelerometers, for example) and the, network world (with Wi-Fi and Bluetooth interfaces). Such devices offer many new opportunities for cooperative sensing applications. For example, users' mobile phones may contribute data to community-oriented information services, from city-wide pollution monitoring to enterprise-wide detection of unauthorized Wi-Fi access points. This people-centric mobile-sensing model introduces a new security challenge in the design of mobile systems: protecting the privacy of participants while allowing their devices to reliably contribute high-quality data to these large-scale applications.
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Cory Cornelius
Dartmouth College
Apu Kapadia
Indiana University Bloomington
David Kotz
Dartmouth College
Aarhus University
Dartmouth College
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Cornelius et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a22fd893b0298f8f757ecb4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/1378600.1378624
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