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Abstract
We introduce the multi-dimensional Skellam mechanism, a discrete differential
privacy mechanism based on the difference of two independent Poisson random
variables. To quantify its privacy guarantees, we analyze the privacy loss
distribution via a numerical evaluation and provide a sharp bound on the
R\'enyi divergence between two shifted Skellam distributions. While useful in
both centralized and distributed privacy applications, we investigate how it
can be applied in the context of federated learning with secure aggregation
under communication constraints. Our theoretical findings and extensive
experimental evaluations demonstrate that the Skellam mechanism provides the
same privacy-accuracy trade-offs as the continuous Gaussian mechanism, even
when the precision is low. More importantly, Skellam is closed under summation
and sampling from it only requires sampling from a Poisson distribution -- an
efficient routine that ships with all machine learning and data analysis
software packages. These features, along with its discrete nature and
competitive privacy-accuracy trade-offs, make it an attractive practical
alternative to the newly introduced discrete Gaussian mechanism.