Fingerprinting Codes Meet Geometry: Improved Lower Bounds for Private Query Release and Adaptive Data Analysis

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Fingerprinting codes are a crucial tool for proving lower bounds in differential privacy. They have been used to prove tight lower bounds for several fundamental questions, especially in the “low accuracy” regime. Unlike reconstruction/discrepancy approaches however, they are more suited for proving worst-case lower bounds, for query sets that arise naturally from the fingerprinting codes construction. In this work, we propose a general framework for proving fingerprinting type lower bounds, that allows us to tailor the technique to the geometry of the query set.
Our approach allows us to prove several new results.

First, we show that any (sample- and population-)accurate algorithm for answering QQ arbitrary adaptive counting queries over a universe X\mathcal{X} to accuracy α\alpha needs Ω(logXlogQα3)\Omega(\frac{\sqrt{\log |\mathcal{X}|}\cdot \log Q}{\alpha^3})

Figure 1: Behavior of sample complexity vs. error trade-off for dd random linear queries (left) and worst-case queries (right) over a universe X\mathcal{X} (log\loglog\log scale). The sample complexity for random queries is discontinuous at αlogXd\alpha \approx \frac{\sqrt{\log |\mathcal{X}|}}{\sqrt{d}}
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