A Survey on Differential Privacy with Machine Learning and Future Outlook
It provides a comprehensive overview for researchers and practitioners concerned with data privacy in ML, but it is incremental as it synthesizes existing work without new results.
This survey paper addresses the need for privacy protection in machine learning by reviewing differential privacy (DP) techniques, categorizing them into traditional and deep learning models, and outlining future research directions.
Nowadays, machine learning models and applications have become increasingly pervasive. With this rapid increase in the development and employment of machine learning models, a concern regarding privacy has risen. Thus, there is a legitimate need to protect the data from leaking and from any attacks. One of the strongest and most prevalent privacy models that can be used to protect machine learning models from any attacks and vulnerabilities is differential privacy (DP). DP is strict and rigid definition of privacy, where it can guarantee that an adversary is not capable to reliably predict if a specific participant is included in the dataset or not. It works by injecting a noise to the data whether to the inputs, the outputs, the ground truth labels, the objective functions, or even to the gradients to alleviate the privacy issue and protect the data. To this end, this survey paper presents different differentially private machine learning algorithms categorized into two main categories (traditional machine learning models vs. deep learning models). Moreover, future research directions for differential privacy with machine learning algorithms are outlined.