CRLGJan 3, 2022

DeepSight: Mitigating Backdoor Attacks in Federated Learning Through Deep Model Inspection

arXiv:2201.00763v1234 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses security vulnerabilities in federated learning systems, protecting against targeted poisoning attacks that compromise model integrity, though it is an incremental improvement over existing defenses.

The paper tackles the problem of backdoor attacks in federated learning by proposing DeepSight, a model filtering approach that identifies and eliminates poisoned model updates with high attack impact, while maintaining model performance on benign data with negligible degradation.

Federated Learning (FL) allows multiple clients to collaboratively train a Neural Network (NN) model on their private data without revealing the data. Recently, several targeted poisoning attacks against FL have been introduced. These attacks inject a backdoor into the resulting model that allows adversary-controlled inputs to be misclassified. Existing countermeasures against backdoor attacks are inefficient and often merely aim to exclude deviating models from the aggregation. However, this approach also removes benign models of clients with deviating data distributions, causing the aggregated model to perform poorly for such clients. To address this problem, we propose DeepSight, a novel model filtering approach for mitigating backdoor attacks. It is based on three novel techniques that allow to characterize the distribution of data used to train model updates and seek to measure fine-grained differences in the internal structure and outputs of NNs. Using these techniques, DeepSight can identify suspicious model updates. We also develop a scheme that can accurately cluster model updates. Combining the results of both components, DeepSight is able to identify and eliminate model clusters containing poisoned models with high attack impact. We also show that the backdoor contributions of possibly undetected poisoned models can be effectively mitigated with existing weight clipping-based defenses. We evaluate the performance and effectiveness of DeepSight and show that it can mitigate state-of-the-art backdoor attacks with a negligible impact on the model's performance on benign data.

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