Can Querying for Bias Leak Protected Attributes? Achieving Privacy With Smooth Sensitivity
Hamman, Faisal, Chen, Jiahao, Dutta, Sanghamitra
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Existing regulations prohibit model developers from accessing protected attributes (gender, race, etc.), often resulting in fairness assessments on populations without knowing their protected groups. In such scenarios, institutions often adopt a separation between the model developers (who train models with no access to the protected attributes) and a compliance team (who may have access to the entire dataset for auditing purposes). However, the model developers might be allowed to test their models for bias by querying the compliance team for group fairness metrics. In this paper, we first demonstrate that simply querying for fairness metrics, such as statistical parity and equalized odds can leak the protected attributes of individuals to the model developers. We demonstrate that there always exist strategies by which the model developers can identify the protected attribute of a targeted individual in the test dataset from just a single query. In particular, we show that one can reconstruct the protected attributes of all the individuals from O(Nk \log( n /Nk)) queries when Nk<
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Jun-5-2023
- Country:
- North America > United States > California > San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.14)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.88)
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