Poster
in
Workshop: 2nd ICML Workshop on New Frontiers in Adversarial Machine Learning
On the Limitations of Model Stealing with Uncertainty Quantification Models
David Pape · Sina Däubener · Thorsten Eisenhofer · Antonio Emanuele Cinà · Lea Schönherr
Keywords: [ uncertainty quantification ] [ model stealing ] [ model extraction ]
Model stealing aims at inferring a victim model's functionality at a fraction of the original training cost.While the goal is clear, in practice the model's architecture, weight dimension, and original training data can not be determined exactly, leading to mutual uncertainty during stealing.In this work, we explicitly tackle this uncertainty by generating multiple possible networks and combining their predictions to improve the quality of the stolen model.For this, we compare five popular uncertainty quantification models in a model stealing task.Surprisingly, our results indicate that the considered models only lead to marginal improvements in terms of label agreement (i.e., fidelity) to the stolen model.To find the cause of this, we inspect the diversity of the model's prediction by looking at the prediction variance as a function of training iterations. We realize that during training, the models tend to have similar predictions, indicating that the network diversity we wanted to leverage using uncertainty quantification models is not (high) enough for improvements on the model stealing task.