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DeepObfuscation: Securing the Structure of Convolutional Neural Networks via Knowledge Distillation

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arxiv 1806.10313 v1 pith:DFTB52OG submitted 2018-06-27 cs.CR

DeepObfuscation: Securing the Structure of Convolutional Neural Networks via Knowledge Distillation

classification cs.CR
keywords learningdeepmodelmodelsattackersconvolutionalnetworksimulation
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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This paper investigates the piracy problem of deep learning models. Designing and training a well-performing model is generally expensive. However, when releasing them, attackers may reverse engineer the models and pirate their design. This paper, therefore, proposes deep learning obfuscation, aiming at obstructing attackers from pirating a deep learning model. In particular, we focus on obfuscating convolutional neural networks (CNN), a widely employed type of deep learning architectures for image recognition. Our approach obfuscates a CNN model eventually by simulating its feature extractor with a shallow and sequential convolutional block. To this end, we employ a recursive simulation method and a joint training method to train the simulation network. The joint training method leverages both the intermediate knowledge generated by a feature extractor and data labels to train a simulation network. In this way, we can obtain an obfuscated model without accuracy loss. We have verified the feasibility of our approach with three prevalent CNNs, i.e., GoogLeNet, ResNet, and DenseNet. Although these networks are very deep with tens or hundreds of layers, we can simulate them in a shallow network including only five or seven convolutional layers. The obfuscated models are even more efficient than the original models. Our obfuscation approach is very effective to protect the critical structure of a deep learning model from being exposed to attackers. Moreover, it can also thwart attackers from pirating the model with transfer learning or incremental learning techniques because the shallow simulation network bears poor learning ability. To our best knowledge, this paper serves as a first attempt to obfuscate deep learning models, which may shed light on more future studies.

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