CRSep 23, 2024
Attack Atlas: A Practitioner's Perspective on Challenges and Pitfalls in Red Teaming GenAIAmbrish Rawat, Stefan Schoepf, Giulio Zizzo et al.
As generative AI, particularly large language models (LLMs), become increasingly integrated into production applications, new attack surfaces and vulnerabilities emerge and put a focus on adversarial threats in natural language and multi-modal systems. Red-teaming has gained importance in proactively identifying weaknesses in these systems, while blue-teaming works to protect against such adversarial attacks. Despite growing academic interest in adversarial risks for generative AI, there is limited guidance tailored for practitioners to assess and mitigate these challenges in real-world environments. To address this, our contributions include: (1) a practical examination of red- and blue-teaming strategies for securing generative AI, (2) identification of key challenges and open questions in defense development and evaluation, and (3) the Attack Atlas, an intuitive framework that brings a practical approach to analyzing single-turn input attacks, placing it at the forefront for practitioners. This work aims to bridge the gap between academic insights and practical security measures for the protection of generative AI systems.
CRFeb 21, 2025Code
Adversarial Prompt Evaluation: Systematic Benchmarking of Guardrails Against Prompt Input Attacks on LLMsGiulio Zizzo, Giandomenico Cornacchia, Kieran Fraser et al.
As large language models (LLMs) become integrated into everyday applications, ensuring their robustness and security is increasingly critical. In particular, LLMs can be manipulated into unsafe behaviour by prompts known as jailbreaks. The variety of jailbreak styles is growing, necessitating the use of external defences known as guardrails. While many jailbreak defences have been proposed, not all defences are able to handle new out-of-distribution attacks due to the narrow segment of jailbreaks used to align them. Moreover, the lack of systematisation around defences has created significant gaps in their practical application. In this work, we perform systematic benchmarking across 15 different defences, considering a broad swathe of malicious and benign datasets. We find that there is significant performance variation depending on the style of jailbreak a defence is subject to. Additionally, we show that based on current datasets available for evaluation, simple baselines can display competitive out-of-distribution performance compared to many state-of-the-art defences. Code is available at https://github.com/IBM/Adversarial-Prompt-Evaluation.
LGNov 25, 2022
Boundary Adversarial Examples Against Adversarial OverfittingMuhammad Zaid Hameed, Beat Buesser
Standard adversarial training approaches suffer from robust overfitting where the robust accuracy decreases when models are adversarially trained for too long. The origin of this problem is still unclear and conflicting explanations have been reported, i.e., memorization effects induced by large loss data or because of small loss data and growing differences in loss distribution of training samples as the adversarial training progresses. Consequently, several mitigation approaches including early stopping, temporal ensembling and weight perturbations on small loss data have been proposed to mitigate the effect of robust overfitting. However, a side effect of these strategies is a larger reduction in clean accuracy compared to standard adversarial training. In this paper, we investigate if these mitigation approaches are complimentary to each other in improving adversarial training performance. We further propose the use of helper adversarial examples that can be obtained with minimal cost in the adversarial example generation, and show how they increase the clean accuracy in the existing approaches without compromising the robust accuracy.
LGJul 3, 2018Code
Adversarial Robustness Toolbox v1.0.0Maria-Irina Nicolae, Mathieu Sinn, Minh Ngoc Tran et al.
Adversarial Robustness Toolbox (ART) is a Python library supporting developers and researchers in defending Machine Learning models (Deep Neural Networks, Gradient Boosted Decision Trees, Support Vector Machines, Random Forests, Logistic Regression, Gaussian Processes, Decision Trees, Scikit-learn Pipelines, etc.) against adversarial threats and helps making AI systems more secure and trustworthy. Machine Learning models are vulnerable to adversarial examples, which are inputs (images, texts, tabular data, etc.) deliberately modified to produce a desired response by the Machine Learning model. ART provides the tools to build and deploy defences and test them with adversarial attacks. Defending Machine Learning models involves certifying and verifying model robustness and model hardening with approaches such as pre-processing inputs, augmenting training data with adversarial samples, and leveraging runtime detection methods to flag any inputs that might have been modified by an adversary. The attacks implemented in ART allow creating adversarial attacks against Machine Learning models which is required to test defenses with state-of-the-art threat models. Supported Machine Learning Libraries include TensorFlow (v1 and v2), Keras, PyTorch, MXNet, Scikit-learn, XGBoost, LightGBM, CatBoost, and GPy. The source code of ART is released with MIT license at https://github.com/IBM/adversarial-robustness-toolbox. The release includes code examples, notebooks with tutorials and documentation (http://adversarial-robustness-toolbox.readthedocs.io).
LGJun 10, 2025
Design Patterns for Securing LLM Agents against Prompt InjectionsLuca Beurer-Kellner, Beat Buesser, Ana-Maria Creţu et al. · eth-zurich
As AI agents powered by Large Language Models (LLMs) become increasingly versatile and capable of addressing a broad spectrum of tasks, ensuring their security has become a critical challenge. Among the most pressing threats are prompt injection attacks, which exploit the agent's resilience on natural language inputs -- an especially dangerous threat when agents are granted tool access or handle sensitive information. In this work, we propose a set of principled design patterns for building AI agents with provable resistance to prompt injection. We systematically analyze these patterns, discuss their trade-offs in terms of utility and security, and illustrate their real-world applicability through a series of case studies.
LGSep 6, 2021
Automated Robustness with Adversarial Training as a Post-Processing StepAmbrish Rawat, Mathieu Sinn, Beat Buesser
Adversarial training is a computationally expensive task and hence searching for neural network architectures with robustness as the criterion can be challenging. As a step towards practical automation, this work explores the efficacy of a simple post processing step in yielding robust deep learning model. To achieve this, we adopt adversarial training as a post-processing step for optimised network architectures obtained from a neural architecture search algorithm. Specific policies are adopted for tuning the hyperparameters of the different steps, resulting in a fully automated pipeline for generating adversarially robust deep learning models. We evidence the usefulness of the proposed pipeline with extensive experimentation across 11 image classification and 9 text classification tasks.
LGDec 3, 2020
FAT: Federated Adversarial TrainingGiulio Zizzo, Ambrish Rawat, Mathieu Sinn et al.
Federated learning (FL) is one of the most important paradigms addressing privacy and data governance issues in machine learning (ML). Adversarial training has emerged, so far, as the most promising approach against evasion threats on ML models. In this paper, we take the first known steps towards federated adversarial training (FAT) combining both methods to reduce the threat of evasion during inference while preserving the data privacy during training. We investigate the effectiveness of the FAT protocol for idealised federated settings using MNIST, Fashion-MNIST, and CIFAR10, and provide first insights on stabilising the training on the LEAF benchmark dataset which specifically emulates a federated learning environment. We identify challenges with this natural extension of adversarial training with regards to achieved adversarial robustness and further examine the idealised settings in the presence of clients undermining model convergence. We find that Trimmed Mean and Bulyan defences can be compromised and we were able to subvert Krum with a novel distillation based attack which presents an apparently "robust" model to the defender while in fact the model fails to provide robustness against simple attack modifications.
AIOct 22, 2019
How can AI Automate End-to-End Data Science?Charu Aggarwal, Djallel Bouneffouf, Horst Samulowitz et al.
Data science is labor-intensive and human experts are scarce but heavily involved in every aspect of it. This makes data science time consuming and restricted to experts with the resulting quality heavily dependent on their experience and skills. To make data science more accessible and scalable, we need its democratization. Automated Data Science (AutoDS) is aimed towards that goal and is emerging as an important research and business topic. We introduce and define the AutoDS challenge, followed by a proposal of a general AutoDS framework that covers existing approaches but also provides guidance for the development of new methods. We categorize and review the existing literature from multiple aspects of the problem setup and employed techniques. Then we provide several views on how AI could succeed in automating end-to-end AutoDS. We hope this survey can serve as insightful guideline for the AutoDS field and provide inspiration for future research.
AIJan 16, 2018
Neural Feature Learning From Relational DatabaseHoang Thanh Lam, Tran Ngoc Minh, Mathieu Sinn et al.
Feature engineering is one of the most important but most tedious tasks in data science. This work studies automation of feature learning from relational database. We first prove theoretically that finding the optimal features from relational data for predictive tasks is NP-hard. We propose an efficient rule-based approach based on heuristics and a deep neural network to automatically learn appropriate features from relational data. We benchmark our approaches in ensembles in past Kaggle competitions. Our new approach wins late medals and beats the state-of-the-art solutions with significant margins. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time an automated data science system could win medals in Kaggle competitions with complex relational database.