CRAIAug 2, 2023

Isolation and Induction: Training Robust Deep Neural Networks against Model Stealing Attacks

arXiv:2308.00958v218 citationsh-index: 63Has Code
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses security vulnerabilities for ML service providers, offering a more efficient defense against model theft with minimal impact on benign performance.

The paper tackles the problem of model stealing attacks in Machine Learning as a Service by proposing the Isolation and Induction (InI) training framework, which reduces stealing accuracy by up to 48% and increases inference speed by up to 25.4x compared to existing methods.

Despite the broad application of Machine Learning models as a Service (MLaaS), they are vulnerable to model stealing attacks. These attacks can replicate the model functionality by using the black-box query process without any prior knowledge of the target victim model. Existing stealing defenses add deceptive perturbations to the victim's posterior probabilities to mislead the attackers. However, these defenses are now suffering problems of high inference computational overheads and unfavorable trade-offs between benign accuracy and stealing robustness, which challenges the feasibility of deployed models in practice. To address the problems, this paper proposes Isolation and Induction (InI), a novel and effective training framework for model stealing defenses. Instead of deploying auxiliary defense modules that introduce redundant inference time, InI directly trains a defensive model by isolating the adversary's training gradient from the expected gradient, which can effectively reduce the inference computational cost. In contrast to adding perturbations over model predictions that harm the benign accuracy, we train models to produce uninformative outputs against stealing queries, which can induce the adversary to extract little useful knowledge from victim models with minimal impact on the benign performance. Extensive experiments on several visual classification datasets (e.g., MNIST and CIFAR10) demonstrate the superior robustness (up to 48% reduction on stealing accuracy) and speed (up to 25.4x faster) of our InI over other state-of-the-art methods. Our codes can be found in https://github.com/DIG-Beihang/InI-Model-Stealing-Defense.

Code Implementations1 repo
Foundations

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