Computer Science > Machine Learning
[Submitted on 22 Nov 2022 (v1), last revised 12 Apr 2023 (this version, v3)]
Title:Self-Ensemble Protection: Training Checkpoints Are Good Data Protectors
View PDFAbstract:As data becomes increasingly vital, a company would be very cautious about releasing data, because the competitors could use it to train high-performance models, thereby posing a tremendous threat to the company's commercial competence. To prevent training good models on the data, we could add imperceptible perturbations to it. Since such perturbations aim at hurting the entire training process, they should reflect the vulnerability of DNN training, rather than that of a single model. Based on this new idea, we seek perturbed examples that are always unrecognized (never correctly classified) in training. In this paper, we uncover them by model checkpoints' gradients, forming the proposed self-ensemble protection (SEP), which is very effective because (1) learning on examples ignored during normal training tends to yield DNNs ignoring normal examples; (2) checkpoints' cross-model gradients are close to orthogonal, meaning that they are as diverse as DNNs with different architectures. That is, our amazing performance of ensemble only requires the computation of training one model. By extensive experiments with 9 baselines on 3 datasets and 5 architectures, SEP is verified to be a new state-of-the-art, e.g., our small $\ell_\infty=2/255$ perturbations reduce the accuracy of a CIFAR-10 ResNet18 from 94.56% to 14.68%, compared to 41.35% by the best-known method. Code is available at this https URL.
Submission history
From: Sizhe Chen [view email][v1] Tue, 22 Nov 2022 04:54:20 UTC (5,553 KB)
[v2] Tue, 28 Feb 2023 13:11:00 UTC (5,557 KB)
[v3] Wed, 12 Apr 2023 11:04:04 UTC (5,557 KB)
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