Privacy-Preserving Federated Learning via System Immersion and Random Matrix Encryption

5 Apr 2022  ·  Haleh Hayati, Carlos Murguia, Nathan van de Wouw ·

Federated learning (FL) has emerged as a privacy solution for collaborative distributed learning where clients train AI models directly on their devices instead of sharing their data with a centralized (potentially adversarial) server. Although FL preserves local data privacy to some extent, it has been shown that information about clients' data can still be inferred from model updates. In recent years, various privacy-preserving schemes have been developed to address this privacy leakage. However, they often provide privacy at the expense of model performance or system efficiency, and balancing these tradeoffs is a crucial challenge when implementing FL schemes. In this manuscript, we propose a Privacy-Preserving Federated Learning (PPFL) framework built on the synergy of matrix encryption and system immersion tools from control theory. The idea is to immerse the learning algorithm, a Stochastic Gradient Decent (SGD), into a higher-dimensional system (the so-called target system) and design the dynamics of the target system so that: the trajectories of the original SGD are immersed/embedded in its trajectories, and it learns on encrypted data (here we use random matrix encryption). Matrix encryption is reformulated at the server as a random change of coordinates that maps original parameters to a higher-dimensional parameter space and enforces that the target SGD converges to an encrypted version of the original SGD optimal solution. The server decrypts the aggregated model using the left inverse of the immersion map. We show that our algorithm provides the same level of accuracy and convergence rate as the standard FL with a negligible computation cost while revealing no information about the clients' data.

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