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Active-Passive Federated Learning for Vertically Partitioned Multi-view Data

Liu, Jiyuan, Liu, Xinwang, Wang, Siqi, Hu, Xingchen, Liao, Qing, Wan, Xinhang, Zhang, Yi, Lv, Xin, He, Kunlun

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Vertical federated learning is a natural and elegant approach to integrate multi-view data vertically partitioned across devices (clients) while preserving their privacies. Apart from the model training, existing methods requires the collaboration of all clients in the model inference. However, the model inference is probably maintained for service in a long time, while the collaboration, especially when the clients belong to different organizations, is unpredictable in real-world scenarios, such as concellation of contract, network unavailablity, etc., resulting in the failure of them. To address this issue, we, at the first attempt, propose a flexible Active-Passive Federated learning (APFed) framework. Specifically, the active client is the initiator of a learning task and responsible to build the complete model, while the passive clients only serve as assistants. Once the model built, the active client can make inference independently. In addition, we instance the APFed framework into two classification methods with employing the reconstruction loss and the contrastive loss on passive clients, respectively. Meanwhile, the two methods are tested in a set of experiments and achieves desired results, validating their effectiveness.


Leveraging Label Information for Stealthy Data Stealing in Vertical Federated Learning

Yao, Duanyi, Li, Songze, Gong, Xueluan, Hou, Sizai, Pan, Gaoning

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

We develop DMAVFL, a novel attack strategy that evades current detection mechanisms. The key idea is to integrate a discriminator with auxiliary classifier that takes a full advantage of the label information (which was completely ignored in previous attacks): on one hand, label information helps to better characterize embeddings of samples from distinct classes, yielding an improved reconstruction performance; on the other hand, computing malicious gradients with label information better mimics the honest training, making the malicious gradients indistinguishable from the honest ones, and the attack much more stealthy. Our comprehensive experiments demonstrate that DMAVFL significantly outperforms existing attacks, and successfully circumvents SOTA defenses for malicious attacks. Additional ablation studies and evaluations on other defenses further underscore the robustness and effectiveness of DMAVFL.


Coded Matrix Computations for D2D-enabled Linearized Federated Learning

Das, Anindya Bijoy, Ramamoorthy, Aditya, Love, David J., Brinton, Christopher G.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Federated learning (FL) is a popular technique for training a global model on data distributed across client devices. Like other distributed training techniques, FL is susceptible to straggler (slower or failed) clients. Recent work has proposed to address this through device-to-device (D2D) offloading, which introduces privacy concerns. In this paper, we propose a novel straggler-optimal approach for coded matrix computations which can significantly reduce the communication delay and privacy issues introduced from D2D data transmissions in FL. Moreover, our proposed approach leads to a considerable improvement of the local computation speed when the generated data matrix is sparse. Numerical evaluations confirm the superiority of our proposed method over baseline approaches.