LGJun 19, 2025

Efficient and Privacy-Preserving Soft Prompt Transfer for LLMs

arXiv:2506.16196v12 citationsh-index: 12ICML
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses efficiency and privacy issues for users adapting LLMs via soft prompts, particularly in API settings, though it is incremental as it builds on existing prompt tuning and knowledge distillation methods.

The paper tackles the problem of soft prompts being tied to specific large language models (LLMs), which increases computational costs and privacy risks when tuning on external models. It proposes POST, a framework that privately tunes soft prompts on a small model and transfers them to a larger LLM, reducing costs and preserving privacy while maintaining utility.

Prompting has become a dominant paradigm for adapting large language models (LLMs). While discrete (textual) prompts are widely used for their interpretability, soft (parameter) prompts have recently gained traction in APIs. This is because they can encode information from more training samples while minimizing the user's token usage, leaving more space in the context window for task-specific input. However, soft prompts are tightly coupled to the LLM they are tuned on, limiting their generalization to other LLMs. This constraint is particularly problematic for efficiency and privacy: (1) tuning prompts on each LLM incurs high computational costs, especially as LLMs continue to grow in size. Additionally, (2) when the LLM is hosted externally, soft prompt tuning often requires sharing private data with the LLM provider. For instance, this is the case with the NVIDIA NeMo API. To address these issues, we propose POST (Privacy Of Soft prompt Transfer), a framework that enables private tuning of soft prompts on a small model and subsequently transfers these prompts to a larger LLM. POST uses knowledge distillation to derive a small model directly from the large LLM to improve prompt transferability, tunes the soft prompt locally, optionally with differential privacy guarantees, and transfers it back to the larger LLM using a small public dataset. Our experiments show that POST reduces computational costs, preserves privacy, and effectively transfers high-utility soft prompts.

Foundations

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