CRLGJul 9, 2025

ZKTorch: Compiling ML Inference to Zero-Knowledge Proofs via Parallel Proof Accumulation

arXiv:2507.07031v26 citationsh-index: 3Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for transparency in ML services while protecting trade secrets, offering a practical solution for large models, though it is incremental in improving efficiency over prior approaches.

The paper tackles the problem of verifying ML model inference without revealing model weights by proposing ZKTorch, a system that compiles models into basic cryptographic blocks and uses a parallel proof accumulation scheme, achieving at least a 3x reduction in proof size and up to a 6x speedup in proving time compared to existing methods.

As AI models become ubiquitous in our daily lives, there has been an increasing demand for transparency in ML services. However, the model owner does not want to reveal the weights, as they are considered trade secrets. To solve this problem, researchers have turned to zero-knowledge proofs of ML model inference. These proofs convince the user that the ML model output is correct, without revealing the weights of the model to the user. Past work on these provers can be placed into two categories. The first method compiles the ML model into a low-level circuit, and proves the circuit using a ZK-SNARK. The second method uses custom cryptographic protocols designed only for a specific class of models. Unfortunately, the first method is highly inefficient, making it impractical for the large models used today, and the second method does not generalize well, making it difficult to update in the rapidly changing field of machine learning. To solve this, we propose ZKTorch, an open source end-to-end proving system that compiles ML models into base cryptographic operations called basic blocks, each proved using specialized protocols. ZKTorch is built on top of a novel parallel extension to the Mira accumulation scheme, enabling succinct proofs with minimal accumulation overhead. These contributions allow ZKTorch to achieve at least a $3\times$ reduction in the proof size compared to specialized protocols and up to a $6\times$ speedup in proving time over a general-purpose ZKML framework.

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