Revisiting Membership Inference Under Realistic Assumptions
We study membership inference in settings where some of the assumptions typically used in previous research are relaxed. First, we consider skewed priors, to cover cases such as when only a small fraction of the candidate pool targeted by the adversary are actually members and develop a PPV-based me...
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Zusammenfassung: | We study membership inference in settings where some of the assumptions
typically used in previous research are relaxed. First, we consider skewed
priors, to cover cases such as when only a small fraction of the candidate pool
targeted by the adversary are actually members and develop a PPV-based metric
suitable for this setting. This setting is more realistic than the balanced
prior setting typically considered by researchers. Second, we consider
adversaries that select inference thresholds according to their attack goals
and develop a threshold selection procedure that improves inference attacks.
Since previous inference attacks fail in imbalanced prior setting, we develop a
new inference attack based on the intuition that inputs corresponding to
training set members will be near a local minimum in the loss function, and
show that an attack that combines this with thresholds on the per-instance loss
can achieve high PPV even in settings where other attacks appear to be
ineffective. Code for our experiments can be found here:
https://github.com/bargavj/EvaluatingDPML. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2005.10881 |