Indiscriminate Poisoning Attacks Are Shortcuts
Indiscriminate data poisoning attacks, which add imperceptible perturbations to training data to maximize the test error of trained models, have become a trendy topic because they are thought to be capable of preventing unauthorized use of data. In this work, we investigate why these perturbations work in principle. We find that the perturbations of advanced poisoning attacks are almost linear separable when assigned with the target labels of the corresponding samples, which hence can work as shortcuts for the learning objective. This important population property has not been unveiled before. Moreover, we further verify that linear separability is indeed the workhorse for poisoning attacks. We synthesize linear separable data as perturbations and show that such synthetic perturbations are as powerful as the deliberately crafted attacks. Our finding suggests that the shortcut learning problem is more serious than previously believed as deep learning heavily relies on shortcuts even if they are of an imperceptible scale and mixed together with the normal features. This finding also suggests that pre-trained feature extractors would disable these poisoning attacks effectively.
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