The remarkable proliferation of deep learning across various industries has underscored the importance of data privacy and security in AI pipelines. As the evolution of sophisticated Membership Inference Attacks (MIAs) threatens the secrecy of individual-specific information used for training deep learning models, Differential Privacy (DP) raises as one of the most utilized techniques to protect models against malicious attacks. However, despite its proven theoretical properties, DP can significantly hamper model performance and increase training time, turning its use impractical in real-world scenarios. Tackling this issue, we present Discriminative Adversarial Privacy (DAP), a novel learning technique designed to address the limitations of DP by achieving a balance between model performance, speed, and privacy. DAP relies on adversarial training based on a novel loss function able to minimise the prediction error while maximising the MIA’s error. In addition, we introduce a novel metric named Accuracy Over Privacy (AOP) to capture the performance-privacy trade-off. Finally, to validate our claims, we compare DAP with diverse DP scenarios, providing an analysis of the results from performance, time, and privacy preservation perspectives.

Discriminative adversarial privacy: balancing accuracy and membership privacy in neural networks

Eugenio Lomurno;Alberto Archetti;Matteo Matteucci
2023-01-01

Abstract

The remarkable proliferation of deep learning across various industries has underscored the importance of data privacy and security in AI pipelines. As the evolution of sophisticated Membership Inference Attacks (MIAs) threatens the secrecy of individual-specific information used for training deep learning models, Differential Privacy (DP) raises as one of the most utilized techniques to protect models against malicious attacks. However, despite its proven theoretical properties, DP can significantly hamper model performance and increase training time, turning its use impractical in real-world scenarios. Tackling this issue, we present Discriminative Adversarial Privacy (DAP), a novel learning technique designed to address the limitations of DP by achieving a balance between model performance, speed, and privacy. DAP relies on adversarial training based on a novel loss function able to minimise the prediction error while maximising the MIA’s error. In addition, we introduce a novel metric named Accuracy Over Privacy (AOP) to capture the performance-privacy trade-off. Finally, to validate our claims, we compare DAP with diverse DP scenarios, providing an analysis of the results from performance, time, and privacy preservation perspectives.
2023
The 34th British Machine Vision Conference Proceedings
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1260911
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