Fraternal Twins: Unifying Attacks on Machine Learning and Digital Watermarking
This work provides a conceptual link between two research fields, potentially improving security for applications like autonomous driving and digital content protection, though it is incremental in unifying existing ideas.
The paper tackles the parallel development of attack and defense strategies in adversarial machine learning and digital watermarking by presenting a unified notation for black-box attacks, demonstrating that countermeasures from watermarking can mitigate model-extraction attacks and machine learning techniques can defend against oracle attacks on watermarks.
Machine learning is increasingly used in security-critical applications, such as autonomous driving, face recognition and malware detection. Most learning methods, however, have not been designed with security in mind and thus are vulnerable to different types of attacks. This problem has motivated the research field of adversarial machine learning that is concerned with attacking and defending learning methods. Concurrently, a different line of research has tackled a very similar problem: In digital watermarking information are embedded in a signal in the presence of an adversary. As a consequence, this research field has also extensively studied techniques for attacking and defending watermarking methods. The two research communities have worked in parallel so far, unnoticeably developing similar attack and defense strategies. This paper is a first effort to bring these communities together. To this end, we present a unified notation of black-box attacks against machine learning and watermarking that reveals the similarity of both settings. To demonstrate the efficacy of this unified view, we apply concepts from watermarking to machine learning and vice versa. We show that countermeasures from watermarking can mitigate recent model-extraction attacks and, similarly, that techniques for hardening machine learning can fend off oracle attacks against watermarks. Our work provides a conceptual link between two research fields and thereby opens novel directions for improving the security of both, machine learning and digital watermarking.