Privacy preserving Neural Network Inference on Encrypted Data with GPUs

26 Nov 2019  ·  Daniel Takabi, Robert Podschwadt, Jeff Druce, Curt Wu, Kevin Procopio ·

Machine Learning as a Service (MLaaS) has become a growing trend in recent years and several such services are currently offered. MLaaS is essentially a set of services that provides machine learning tools and capabilities as part of cloud computing services. In these settings, the cloud has pre-trained models that are deployed and large computing capacity whereas the clients can use these models to make predictions without having to worry about maintaining the models and the service. However, the main concern with MLaaS is the privacy of the client's data. Although there have been several proposed approaches in the literature to run machine learning models on encrypted data, the performance is still far from being satisfactory for practical use. In this paper, we aim to accelerate the performance of running machine learning on encrypted data using combination of Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE), Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) and Graphics Processing Units (GPUs). We use a number of optimization techniques, and efficient GPU-based implementation to achieve high performance. We evaluate a CNN whose architecture is similar to AlexNet to classify homomorphically encrypted samples from the Cars Overhead With Context (COWC) dataset. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first time such a complex network and large dataset is evaluated on encrypted data. Our approach achieved reasonable classification accuracy of 95% for the COWC dataset. In terms of performance, our results show that we could achieve several thousands times speed up when we implement GPU-accelerated FHE operations on encrypted floating point numbers.

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