Share your thoughts, 1 month free Claude Pro on usSee more
WorkDL logo mark

Poisoning Attacks against Support Vector Machines

About

We investigate a family of poisoning attacks against Support Vector Machines (SVM). Such attacks inject specially crafted training data that increases the SVM's test error. Central to the motivation for these attacks is the fact that most learning algorithms assume that their training data comes from a natural or well-behaved distribution. However, this assumption does not generally hold in security-sensitive settings. As we demonstrate, an intelligent adversary can, to some extent, predict the change of the SVM's decision function due to malicious input and use this ability to construct malicious data. The proposed attack uses a gradient ascent strategy in which the gradient is computed based on properties of the SVM's optimal solution. This method can be kernelized and enables the attack to be constructed in the input space even for non-linear kernels. We experimentally demonstrate that our gradient ascent procedure reliably identifies good local maxima of the non-convex validation error surface, which significantly increases the classifier's test error.

Battista Biggio, Blaine Nelson, Pavel Laskov• 2012

Related benchmarks

TaskDatasetResultRank
Image ClassificationCIFAR-10 IID
Accuracy87.7
166
Image ClassificationCIFAR10 non-iid
Accuracy87.3
162
Image ClassificationCIFAR-10 non-IID (test)
Average Test Accuracy81.3
14
Showing 3 of 3 rows

Other info

Follow for update