English

Differentially Private Linear Programming: Reduced Sub-Optimality and Guaranteed Constraint Satisfaction

Optimization and Control 2025-11-11 v2

Abstract

Linear programming is a fundamental tool in a wide range of decision systems. However, without privacy protections, sharing the solution to a linear program may reveal information about the underlying data used to formulate it, which may be sensitive. Therefore, in this paper we introduce an approach for protecting sensitive data while formulating and solving a linear program. First, we prove that this method perturbs objectives and constraints in a way that makes them differentially private. Then, we show that (i) privatized problems always have solutions, and (ii) their solutions satisfy the constraints in their corresponding original, non-private problems. The latter result solves an open problem in the literature. Next, we analytically bound the expected sub-optimality of solutions that is induced by privacy. Numerical simulations show that, under a typical privacy setup, the solution produced by our method yields a 65%65\% reduction in sub-optimality compared to the state of the art.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2501.19315,
  title  = {Differentially Private Linear Programming: Reduced Sub-Optimality and Guaranteed Constraint Satisfaction},
  author = {Alexander Benvenuti and Brendan Bialy and Miriam Dennis and Matthew Hale},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2501.19315},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

20 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T21:28:03.265Z