CVCRLGDec 10, 2023

Data-Free Hard-Label Robustness Stealing Attack

arXiv:2312.05924v211 citationsHas CodeAAAI
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a critical security gap for MLaaS users by enabling attackers to steal robust models without natural data, which is incremental as it extends existing attacks to hard-label and robustness-focused settings.

The paper tackles the problem of model stealing attacks in practical scenarios where only hard labels are available and data distribution is unknown, introducing a data-free hard-label method that steals both accuracy and robustness, achieving a clone model with 77.86% clean accuracy and 39.51% robust accuracy on CIFAR-10, close to the target model.

The popularity of Machine Learning as a Service (MLaaS) has led to increased concerns about Model Stealing Attacks (MSA), which aim to craft a clone model by querying MLaaS. Currently, most research on MSA assumes that MLaaS can provide soft labels and that the attacker has a proxy dataset with a similar distribution. However, this fails to encapsulate the more practical scenario where only hard labels are returned by MLaaS and the data distribution remains elusive. Furthermore, most existing work focuses solely on stealing the model accuracy, neglecting the model robustness, while robustness is essential in security-sensitive scenarios, e.g., face-scan payment. Notably, improving model robustness often necessitates the use of expensive techniques such as adversarial training, thereby further making stealing robustness a more lucrative prospect. In response to these identified gaps, we introduce a novel Data-Free Hard-Label Robustness Stealing (DFHL-RS) attack in this paper, which enables the stealing of both model accuracy and robustness by simply querying hard labels of the target model without the help of any natural data. Comprehensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our method. The clone model achieves a clean accuracy of 77.86% and a robust accuracy of 39.51% against AutoAttack, which are only 4.71% and 8.40% lower than the target model on the CIFAR-10 dataset, significantly exceeding the baselines. Our code is available at: https://github.com/LetheSec/DFHL-RS-Attack.

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