Ziye Geng

CR
3papers
2citations
Novelty53%
AI Score43

3 Papers

CRMar 22
Fingerprinting Deep Neural Networks for Ownership Protection: An Analytical Approach

Guang Yang, Ziye Geng, Yihang Chen et al.

Adversarial-example-based fingerprinting approaches, which leverage the decision boundary characteristics of deep neural networks (DNNs) to craft fingerprints, have proven effective for model ownership protection. However, a fundamental challenge remains unresolved: how far a fingerprint should be placed from the decision boundary to simultaneously satisfy two essential properties, i.e., robustness and uniqueness, for effective and reliable ownership protection. Despite the importance of the fingerprint-to-boundary distance, existing works lack a theoretical solution and instead rely on empirical heuristics, which may violate either robustness or uniqueness properties. We propose AnaFP, an analytical fingerprinting scheme that constructs fingerprints under theoretical guidance. Specifically, we formulate fingerprint generation as controlling the fingerprint-to-boundary distance through a tunable stretch factor. To ensure both robustness and uniqueness, we mathematically formalize these properties that determine the lower and upper bounds of the stretch factor. These bounds jointly define an admissible interval within which the stretch factor must lie, thereby establishing a theoretical connection between the two constraints and the fingerprint-to-boundary distance. To enable practical fingerprint generation, we approximate the original (infinite) sets of pirated and independently trained models using two finite surrogate model pools and employ a quantile-based relaxation strategy to relax the derived bounds. Due to the circular dependency between the lower bound and the stretch factor, we apply grid search over the admissible interval to determine the most feasible stretch factor. Extensive experimental results show that AnaFP consistently outperforms prior methods, achieving effective ownership verification across diverse model architectures and model modification attacks.

CRMar 26
LiteGuard: Efficient Task-Agnostic Model Fingerprinting with Enhanced Generalization

Guang Yang, Ziye Geng, Yihang Chen et al.

Task-agnostic model fingerprinting has recently gained increasing attention due to its ability to provide a universal framework applicable across diverse model architectures and tasks. The current state-of-the-art method, MetaV, ensures generalization by jointly training a set of fingerprints and a neural-network-based global verifier using two large and diverse model sets: one composed of pirated models (i.e., the protected model and its variants) and the other comprising independently trained models. However, publicly available models are scarce in many real-world domains, and constructing such model sets requires intensive training and massive computational resources, posing a significant barrier to deployment. Reducing the number of models can alleviate the overhead, but increases the risk of overfitting, a problem further exacerbated by MetaV's entangled design, in which all fingerprints and the global verifier are jointly trained. This overfitting issue compromises the generalization capability for verifying unseen models. In this paper, we propose LiteGuard, an efficient task-agnostic fingerprinting framework that attains enhanced generalization while significantly lowering computational cost. Specifically, LiteGuard introduces two key innovations: (i) a checkpoint-based model set augmentation strategy that enriches model diversity by leveraging intermediate model snapshots captured during training of each pirated and independently trained model, thereby alleviating the need to train a large number of such models, and (ii) a local verifier architecture that pairs each fingerprint with a lightweight local verifier, thereby reducing parameter entanglement and mitigating overfitting. Extensive experiments across five representative tasks show that LiteGuard consistently outperforms MetaV in both generalization performance and computational efficiency.

CRMar 26
IrisFP: Adversarial-Example-based Model Fingerprinting with Enhanced Uniqueness and Robustness

Ziye Geng, Guang Yang, Yihang Chen et al.

We propose IrisFP, a novel adversarial-example-based model fingerprinting framework that enhances both uniqueness and robustness by leveraging multi-boundary characteristics, multi-sample behaviors, and fingerprint discriminative power assessment to generate composite-sample fingerprints. Three key innovations make IrisFP outstanding: 1) It positions fingerprints near the intersection of all decision boundaries - unlike prior methods that target a single boundary - thus increasing the prediction margin without placing fingerprints deep inside target class regions, enhancing both robustness and uniqueness; 2) It constructs composite-sample fingerprints, each comprising multiple samples close to the multi-boundary intersection, to exploit collective behavior patterns and further boost uniqueness; and 3) It assesses the discriminative power of generated fingerprints using statistical separability metrics developed based on two reference model sets, respectively, for pirated and independently-trained models, retains the fingerprints with high discriminative power, and assigns fingerprint-specific thresholds to such retained fingerprints. Extensive experiments show that IrisFP consistently outperforms state-of-the-art methods, achieving reliable ownership verification by enhancing both robustness and uniqueness.