Public preview: This feature is in public preview. It is available to all customers and can be enabled on the Immuta app settings page.
Project owners can use policy adjustments to increase a data set's utility while retaining the amount of k-anonymization that upholds de-identification requirements. With this feature enabled, users can redistribute the noise across multiple columns of a data source within a project to make specific columns more useful for their analysis. Since these adjustments only occur within the project and do not change the individual data policies, data users must be acting under the project to see the adjustments in the data source.
For example, a policy might mask these data source columns with k-anonymization: Income
, Education
, EmploymentStatus
, Gender
, and Location Code
. When the analyst examines the data, the percent NULL has been predetermined by Immuta with an equal weight across all of these columns. However, if the analyst's work hinges on the EmploymentStatus
column, the project owner can adjust the weights on the policy adjustment tab in the project to make the necessary data (EmploymentStatus
) less NULL.
For columns that are already well-disclosed (meaning they already have a low percent null), the same percent null will display even when you drastically change the weight distribution.
Increasing the weight of a column that is already well-disclosed will not change the outcome. Generally, the biggest impact will be seen when you increase the weights of the largest percent null column. (The only exception to this is if that column already has a lot of native nulls in the remote database.)
This feature provides an option to allow fields in the clear when creating a purpose, permitting specified analysts to bypass k-anonymization in specific circumstances.
When any purpose with the allow fields in the clear property enabled is approved for use within a project, a project member can proceed through the policy adjustment workflow and specify columns to be unmasked.
Immuta projects combine users and data sources under a common purpose. Sometimes this purpose is for a single user to organize their data sources or to control an entire schema of data sources through a single projects screen; however, most often this is an Immuta purpose for which the data has been approved to be used and will restrict access to data and streamline team collaboration.
Project members: The users who will create, manage, and use projects.
Purposes: Purposes allow governors to define exceptions to policies based on how a user will use the data.
Data sources: Projects create an environment within Immuta where the user will only see the data sources within the project, despite their subscription to other data sources.
Subscription policy: Project users with the appropriate permissions can set a subscription policy on a project to control the users who can join.
Documentation: Project users can create documentation within the Immuta project page, allowing for an easy and consistent trail of communication.
Equalization: Project equalization ensures that the data in the project looks identical to all members, regardless of their level of access to data.
Workspaces: With equalization enabled, project users can create Snowflake or Databricks workspaces where users can view and write data.
Derived data sources: Derived data sources are the data sources that come from workspaces. Once they are created, they automatically inherit policies from their parent sources.
Masked joins: Within a project, users can join masked columns.
The features and capabilities of each user differ based on the user's role within the project and within Immuta. Roles and their capabilities are outlined below.
Project role | Capabilities |
---|---|
Data governors and users with the PROJECT_MANAGEMENT
permission are responsible for configuring and approving project purposes and acknowledgement statements.
Purposes help define the scope and use of data within a project and allow users to meet purpose restrictions on policies. Governors create and manage purposes and their sub-purposes, which project owners then add to their project(s) and use to drive data policies. Project owners can also create a purpose; however, they remain in a staged state until a governor or project manager approves the purpose request.
Purposes can be constructed as a hierarchy, containing nested sub-purposes, much like tags in Immuta. This design allows more flexibility in managing purpose-based restriction policies and transparency in the relationships among purposes.
For example, if the purpose Research
included Marketing
, Product
, and Onboarding
as sub-purposes, a governor could write the following global policy:
Limit usage to purpose(s) Research for everyone on data sources tagged PHI.
This hierarchy allows you to create this as a single purpose instead of creating separate purposes, which must then each be added to policies as they evolve.
Now, any user acting under the purpose or sub-purpose of Research
- whether Research.Marketing
or Research.Onboarding
will meet the criteria of this policy. Consequently, purpose hierarchies eliminate the need for a governor to rewrite these global policies when sub-purposes are added or removed. If new projects with new Research purposes are added, the relevant global policy will automatically be enforced.
Projects with purposes require owners and subscribers to acknowledge that they will only use the data for those purposes by affirming or rejecting acknowledgement statements. Each purpose has its own acknowledgement statement, and a project with multiple purposes requires users to accept more than one acknowledgement statement. Immuta keeps a record of each project member's response to the acknowledgement statement(s) and records the purpose, the time of the acknowledgement, and the text of the acknowledgement. Purposes can use Immuta's default acknowledgement statement or one customized by a data governor.
If users accept the statement, they become a project member. If they reject the acknowledgement statement, they are denied access to the project.
When a user is working within the context of a project, they will only see the data in that project. This helps to prevent data leaks when users collaborate. Users can switch project contexts to access various data sources while acting under the appropriate purpose. By default, there will be no project selected, even if the user belongs to one or more projects in Immuta.
When users change project contexts, queries reflect users as acting under the purposes of that project, which may allow additional access to data if there are purpose restrictions on the data source(s). This process also allows organizations to track not just whether a specific data source is being used, but why.
Schema projects are a collection of data sources that Immuta creates when multiple data sources belong to the same schema. For information about schema projects, see the Schema project guide.
Project owner
Users with the CREATE_PROJECT
permission can
enable project equalization and masked joins
disable, delete, and enable projects
create Snowflake or Databricks workspaces
Project governor
Users with the GOVERNANCE
permission can
manage project members, project tags, and project subscription policies
add and remove project data sources
Project manager
Users with the PROJECT _MANAGEMENT
permission can
add and remove project data sources
Project member
Once subscribed to a project, all users can
add data sources to the project (unless project equalization or masked joins is enabled)