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Abstract
Machine learning (ML) models that use deep neural networks are vulnerable to
backdoor attacks. Such attacks involve the insertion of a (hidden) trigger by
an adversary. As a consequence, any input that contains the trigger will cause
the neural network to misclassify the input to a (single) target class, while
classifying other inputs without a trigger correctly. ML models that contain a
backdoor are called Trojan models. Backdoors can have severe consequences in
safety-critical cyber and cyber physical systems when only the outputs of the
model are available. Defense mechanisms have been developed and illustrated to
be able to distinguish between outputs from a Trojan model and a non-Trojan
model in the case of a single-target backdoor attack with accuracy > 96
percent. Understanding the limitations of a defense mechanism requires the
construction of examples where the mechanism fails. Current single-target
backdoor attacks require one trigger per target class. We introduce a new, more
general attack that will enable a single trigger to result in misclassification
to more than one target class. Such a misclassification will depend on the true
(actual) class that the input belongs to. We term this category of attacks
multi-target backdoor attacks. We demonstrate that a Trojan model with either a
single-target or multi-target trigger can be trained so that the accuracy of a
defense mechanism that seeks to distinguish between outputs coming from a
Trojan and a non-Trojan model will be reduced. Our approach uses the non-Trojan
model as a teacher for the Trojan model and solves a min-max optimization
problem between the Trojan model and defense mechanism. Empirical evaluations
demonstrate that our training procedure reduces the accuracy of a
state-of-the-art defense mechanism from >96 to 0 percent.