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Abstract
Self-supervised models are increasingly prevalent in machine learning (ML)
since they reduce the need for expensively labeled data. Because of their
versatility in downstream applications, they are increasingly used as a service
exposed via public APIs. At the same time, these encoder models are
particularly vulnerable to model stealing attacks due to the high
dimensionality of vector representations they output. Yet, encoders remain
undefended: existing mitigation strategies for stealing attacks focus on
supervised learning. We introduce a new dataset inference defense, which uses
the private training set of the victim encoder model to attribute its ownership
in the event of stealing. The intuition is that the log-likelihood of an
encoder's output representations is higher on the victim's training data than
on test data if it is stolen from the victim, but not if it is independently
trained. We compute this log-likelihood using density estimation models. As
part of our evaluation, we also propose measuring the fidelity of stolen
encoders and quantifying the effectiveness of the theft detection without
involving downstream tasks; instead, we leverage mutual information and
distance measurements. Our extensive empirical results in the vision domain
demonstrate that dataset inference is a promising direction for defending
self-supervised models against model stealing.