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Privacy-Preserving Machine Learning

You're reading from   Privacy-Preserving Machine Learning A use-case-driven approach to building and protecting ML pipelines from privacy and security threats

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800564671
Length 402 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Srinivasa Rao Aravilli Srinivasa Rao Aravilli
Author Profile Icon Srinivasa Rao Aravilli
Srinivasa Rao Aravilli
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction to Data Privacy and Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Data Privacy, Privacy Breaches, and Threat Modeling 3. Chapter 2: Machine Learning Phases and Privacy Threats/Attacks in Each Phase 4. Part 2: Use Cases of Privacy-Preserving Machine Learning and a Deep Dive into Differential Privacy
5. Chapter 3: Overview of Privacy-Preserving Data Analysis and an Introduction to Differential Privacy 6. Chapter 4: Overview of Differential Privacy Algorithms and Applications of Differential Privacy 7. Chapter 5: Developing Applications with Differential Privacy Using Open Source Frameworks 8. Part 3: Hands-On Federated Learning
9. Chapter 6: Federated Learning and Implementing FL Using Open Source Frameworks 10. Chapter 7: Federated Learning Benchmarks, Start-Ups, and the Next Opportunity 11. Part 4: Homomorphic Encryption, SMC, Confidential Computing, and LLMs
12. Chapter 8: Homomorphic Encryption and Secure Multiparty Computation 13. Chapter 9: Confidential Computing – What, Why, and the Current State 14. Chapter 10: Preserving Privacy in Large Language Models 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

The steps involved in implementing FL

The following are the five steps that are typically followed to implement FL. There can be alternatives/changes to these steps, but initially, these are the steps that need to be followed:

The server side – the initialization of the global model: In this step, the server starts and accepts the client requests. Before actually starting the server, the model on the server side will be initiated with model parameters. Typically, model parameters will be initiated with zeros or from the previous checkpoint model.

The server sends model parameters to all or a subset of clients: In this step, the server sends the initial model parameters to all clients (for cross-silo FL clients, they will be within the same institutions and may only be numbered in the tens) or a subset of clients (in the case of cross-device FL where devices are in the millions, the server decides to select only a subset from the total devices). Each client will make use...

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