Practical Differentially Private and Byzantine-resilient Federated Learning
This addresses the critical need for secure and private federated learning systems, offering a novel integration that improves performance over prior incremental approaches.
The paper tackles the combined challenge of privacy and Byzantine resilience in federated learning by proposing a protocol that uses differentially private stochastic gradient descent and leverages random noise to reject Byzantine attacks, achieving high accuracy with up to 90% Byzantine workers and in high privacy regimes.
Privacy and Byzantine resilience are two indispensable requirements for a federated learning (FL) system. Although there have been extensive studies on privacy and Byzantine security in their own track, solutions that consider both remain sparse. This is due to difficulties in reconciling privacy-preserving and Byzantine-resilient algorithms. In this work, we propose a solution to such a two-fold issue. We use our version of differentially private stochastic gradient descent (DP-SGD) algorithm to preserve privacy and then apply our Byzantine-resilient algorithms. We note that while existing works follow this general approach, an in-depth analysis on the interplay between DP and Byzantine resilience has been ignored, leading to unsatisfactory performance. Specifically, for the random noise introduced by DP, previous works strive to reduce its impact on the Byzantine aggregation. In contrast, we leverage the random noise to construct an aggregation that effectively rejects many existing Byzantine attacks. We provide both theoretical proof and empirical experiments to show our protocol is effective: retaining high accuracy while preserving the DP guarantee and Byzantine resilience. Compared with the previous work, our protocol 1) achieves significantly higher accuracy even in a high privacy regime; 2) works well even when up to 90% of distributive workers are Byzantine.