Protecting User Privacy: An Approach for Untraceable Web Browsing History and 
Unambiguous User Profiles

The overturning of the Internet Privacy Rules by the Federal Communications 
Commissions (FCC) in late March 2017 allows Internet Service Providers (ISPs) 
to collect, share and sell their customers' Web browsing data without their 
consent. With third-party trackers embedded on Web pages, this new rule has put 
user privacy under more risk. The need arises for users on their own to protect 
their Web browsing history from any potential adversaries. Although some 
available solutions such as Tor, VPN, and HTTPS can help users conceal their 
online activities, their use can also significantly hamper personalized online 
services, i.e., degraded utility. In this paper, we design an effective Web 
browsing history anonymization scheme, PBooster, aiming to protect users' 
privacy while retaining the utility of their Web browsing history. The proposed 
model pollutes users' Web browsing history by automatically inferring how many 
and what links should be added to the history while addressing the 
utility-privacy trade-off challenge. We conduct experiments to validate the 
quality of the manipulated Web browsing history and examine the robustness of 
the proposed approach for user privacy protection.

https://arxiv.org/abs/1811.09340

https://arxiv.org/pdf/1811.09340.pdf

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