CRDCLGJan 11, 2025

SafeSplit: A Novel Defense Against Client-Side Backdoor Attacks in Split Learning (Full Version)

arXiv:2501.06650v27 citationsh-index: 12NDSS
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses a security vulnerability in Split Learning, a distributed deep learning framework, by providing a novel defense against backdoor attacks, which is incremental as it builds on existing SL architecture but introduces new detection methods.

The paper tackles the problem of client-side backdoor attacks in Split Learning, where malicious clients can manipulate local datasets to alter the DNN's behavior, and presents SafeSplit as the first defense, demonstrating high efficacy in mitigating these attacks while preserving model utility.

Split Learning (SL) is a distributed deep learning approach enabling multiple clients and a server to collaboratively train and infer on a shared deep neural network (DNN) without requiring clients to share their private local data. The DNN is partitioned in SL, with most layers residing on the server and a few initial layers and inputs on the client side. This configuration allows resource-constrained clients to participate in training and inference. However, the distributed architecture exposes SL to backdoor attacks, where malicious clients can manipulate local datasets to alter the DNN's behavior. Existing defenses from other distributed frameworks like Federated Learning are not applicable, and there is a lack of effective backdoor defenses specifically designed for SL. We present SafeSplit, the first defense against client-side backdoor attacks in Split Learning (SL). SafeSplit enables the server to detect and filter out malicious client behavior by employing circular backward analysis after a client's training is completed, iteratively reverting to a trained checkpoint where the model under examination is found to be benign. It uses a two-fold analysis to identify client-induced changes and detect poisoned models. First, a static analysis in the frequency domain measures the differences in the layer's parameters at the server. Second, a dynamic analysis introduces a novel rotational distance metric that assesses the orientation shifts of the server's layer parameters during training. Our comprehensive evaluation across various data distributions, client counts, and attack scenarios demonstrates the high efficacy of this dual analysis in mitigating backdoor attacks while preserving model utility.

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