CVAINov 15, 2025

Model Inversion Attack Against Deep Hashing

arXiv:2511.12233v1h-index: 1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses privacy vulnerabilities in deep hashing systems, which are critical for applications like retrieval but have been overlooked, though it is incremental as it adapts model inversion to a specific domain.

The paper tackles the problem of reconstructing original training data from deep hashing models, which poses privacy risks like biometric forgery, and proposes DHMI, a diffusion-based model inversion framework that successfully generates high-fidelity images in black-box settings, outperforming existing methods.

Deep hashing improves retrieval efficiency through compact binary codes, yet it introduces severe and often overlooked privacy risks. The ability to reconstruct original training data from hash codes could lead to serious threats such as biometric forgery and privacy breaches. However, model inversion attacks specifically targeting deep hashing models remain unexplored, leaving their security implications unexamined. This research gap stems from the inaccessibility of genuine training hash codes and the highly discrete Hamming space, which prevents existing methods from adapting to deep hashing. To address these challenges, we propose DHMI, the first diffusion-based model inversion framework designed for deep hashing. DHMI first clusters an auxiliary dataset to derive semantic hash centers as surrogate anchors. It then introduces a surrogate-guided denoising optimization method that leverages a novel attack metric (fusing classification consistency and hash proximity) to dynamically select candidate samples. A cluster of surrogate models guides the refinement of these candidates, ensuring the generation of high-fidelity and semantically consistent images. Experiments on multiple datasets demonstrate that DHMI successfully reconstructs high-resolution, high-quality images even under the most challenging black-box setting, where no training hash codes are available. Our method outperforms the existing state-of-the-art model inversion attacks in black-box scenarios, confirming both its practical efficacy and the critical privacy risks inherent in deep hashing systems.

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