Adversarial Image Perturbation for Privacy Protection -- A Game Theory Perspective

03/28/2017
by   Seong Joon Oh, et al.
0

Users like sharing personal photos with others through social media. At the same time, they might want to make automatic identification in such photos difficult or even impossible. Classic obfuscation methods such as blurring are not only unpleasant but also not as effective as one would expect. Recent studies on adversarial image perturbations (AIP) suggest that it is possible to confuse recognition systems effectively without unpleasant artifacts. However, in the presence of counter measures against AIPs, it is unclear how effective AIP would be in particular when the choice of counter measure is unknown. Game theory provides tools for studying the interaction between agents with uncertainties in the strategies. We introduce a general game theoretical framework for the user-recogniser dynamics, and present a case study that involves current state of the art AIP and person recognition techniques. We derive the optimal strategy for the user that assures an upper bound on the recognition rate independent of the recogniser's counter measure. Code is available at https://goo.gl/hgvbNK.

READ FULL TEXT

page 3

page 8

page 14

page 15

page 16

page 17

research
12/15/2020

FoggySight: A Scheme for Facial Lookup Privacy

Advances in deep learning algorithms have enabled better-than-human perf...
research
10/09/2017

Person Recognition in Social Media Photos

People nowadays share large parts of their personal lives through social...
research
09/11/2015

Person Recognition in Personal Photo Collections

Recognising persons in everyday photos presents major challenges (occlud...
research
11/24/2017

Natural and Effective Obfuscation by Head Inpainting

As more and more personal photos are shared online, being able to obfusc...
research
12/22/2021

Travel Guides for Creative Tourists, Powered by Geotagged Social Media

Many modern tourists want to know about everyday life and spend time lik...
research
07/28/2016

Faceless Person Recognition; Privacy Implications in Social Media

As we shift more of our lives into the virtual domain, the volume of dat...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset