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A Distributed Trust Framework for Privacy-Preserving Machine Learning

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arxiv 2006.02456 v1 pith:5HCO7R2W submitted 2020-06-03 cs.CR cs.CYcs.DCcs.GTcs.LG

A Distributed Trust Framework for Privacy-Preserving Machine Learning

classification cs.CR cs.CYcs.DCcs.GTcs.LG
keywords datadistributedlearningtrustprivacy-preservingmachinemodelworkflow
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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When training a machine learning model, it is standard procedure for the researcher to have full knowledge of both the data and model. However, this engenders a lack of trust between data owners and data scientists. Data owners are justifiably reluctant to relinquish control of private information to third parties. Privacy-preserving techniques distribute computation in order to ensure that data remains in the control of the owner while learning takes place. However, architectures distributed amongst multiple agents introduce an entirely new set of security and trust complications. These include data poisoning and model theft. This paper outlines a distributed infrastructure which is used to facilitate peer-to-peer trust between distributed agents; collaboratively performing a privacy-preserving workflow. Our outlined prototype sets industry gatekeepers and governance bodies as credential issuers. Before participating in the distributed learning workflow, malicious actors must first negotiate valid credentials. We detail a proof of concept using Hyperledger Aries, Decentralised Identifiers (DIDs) and Verifiable Credentials (VCs) to establish a distributed trust architecture during a privacy-preserving machine learning experiment. Specifically, we utilise secure and authenticated DID communication channels in order to facilitate a federated learning workflow related to mental health care data.

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