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A mechanism for releasing information about a statistical database with sensitive data must resolve a trade-off between utility and privacy. Privacy can be rigorously quantified using the framework of {em differential privacy}, which requires that a mechanisms output distribution is nearly the same whether or not a given database row is included or excluded. The goal of this paper is strong and general utility guarantees, subject to differential privacy. We pursue mechanisms that guarantee near-optimal utility to every potential user, independent of its side information (modeled as a prior distribution over query results) and preferences (modeled via a loss function). Our main result is: for each fixed count query and differential privacy level, there is a {em geometric mechanism} $M^*$ -- a discrete variant of the simple and well-studied Laplace mechanism -- that is {em simultaneously expected loss-minimizing} for every possible user, subject to the differential privacy constraint. This is an extremely strong utility guarantee: {em every} potential user $u$, no matter what its side information and preferences, derives as much utility from $M^*$ as from interacting with a differentially private mechanism $M_u$ that is optimally tailored to $u$.
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