Nicholas Carlini
Nicholas Carlini | |
---|---|
Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley (PhD) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Computer Security |
Institutions | Google DeepMind |
Thesis | Evaluation and Design of Robust Neural Network Defenses (2018) |
Doctoral advisor | David A. Wagner |
Website | nicholas |
Nicholas Carlini is an American researcher affiliated with Google DeepMind who has published research in the fields of computer security and machine learning. He is known for his work on adversarial machine learning, particularly his work on the Carlini & Wagner attack in 2016. This attack was particularly useful in defeating defensive distillation, a method used to increase model robustness, and has since been effective against other defenses against adversarial input.
In 2018, Carlini demonstrated an attack on Mozilla's DeepSpeech model, showing that hidden commands could be embedded in speech inputs, which the model would execute even if they were inaudible to humans. He also led a team at UC Berkeley that successfully broke seven out of eleven defenses against adversarial attacks presented at the 2018 International Conference on Learning Representations.
In addition to his work on adversarial attacks, Carlini has made significant contributions to understanding the privacy risks of machine learning models. In 2020, he revealed that large language models, like GPT-2, could memorize and output personally identifiable information. His research demonstrated that this issue worsened with larger models, and he later showed similar vulnerabilities in generative image models, such as Stable Diffusion.
Life and career
[edit]Nicholas Carlini obtained his Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science and Mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2013.[1] He then continued his studies at the same university, where he pursued a PhD under the supervision of David Wagner, completing it in 2018.[1][2][3] Carlini became known for his work on adversarial machine learning. In 2016, he worked alongside Wagner to develop the Carlini & Wagner attack, a method of generating adversarial examples against machine learning models. The attack was proved to be useful against defensive distillation, a popular mechanism where a student model is trained based on the features of a parent model to increase the robustness and generalizability of student models. The attack gained popularity when it was shown that the methodology was also effective against most other defenses, rendering them ineffective.[4][5] In 2018, Carlini demonstrated an attack against Mozilla Foundation's DeepSpeech model where he showed that by hiding malicious commands inside normal speech input the speech model would respond to the hidden commands even when the commands were not discernible by humans.[6][7] In the same year, Carlini and his team at UC Berkeley showed that out of the 11 papers presenting defenses to adversarial attacks accepted in that year's ICLR conference, seven of the defenses could be broken.[8]
Since 2021, he and his team have been working on large-language models, creating a questionnaire where humans typically scored 35% whereas AI models scored in the 40%, with GPT-3 getting 38% which could be improved to 40% through few shot prompting. The best performer in the test was UnifiedQA, a model developed by Google specifically for answer questions and answer sets.[9] Carlini has also developed methods to cause large language models like ChatGPT to answer harmful questions like how to construct bombs.[10][11]
He is also known for his work studying the privacy of machine learning models. In 2020, he showed for the first time that large language models would memorize some of the text data that they were trained on. For example, he found that GPT-2 could output personally identifiable information.[12] He then led an analysis of larger models and studied how memorization increased with model size. Then, in 2022 he showed the same vulnerability in generative image models, and specifically diffusion models, by showing that Stable Diffusion could output images of people's faces that it was trained on.[13] Following on this, Carlini then showed that ChatGPT would also sometimes output exact copies of webpages it was trained on, including personally identifiable information.[14] Some of these studies have since been referenced by the courts in debating the copyright status of AI models.[15]
Other work
[edit]Carlini received the Best of Show award at the 2020 IOCCC for implementing a tic-tac-toe game entirely with calls to printf, expanding on work from a research paper of his from 2015. The judges commented on his submission "This year's Best of Show (carlini) is such a novel way of obfuscation that it would be worth of a special mention in the (future) Best of IOCCC list!". [sic][16]
Awards
[edit]- Best Student Paper Award, IEEE S&P 2017 ("Towards Evaluating the Robustness of Neural Networks")[17]
- Best Paper Award, ICML 2018 ("Obfuscated Gradients Give a False Sense of Security: Circumventing Defenses to Adversarial Examples")[18]
- Distinguished Paper Award, USENIX 2021 ("Poisoning the Unlabeled Dataset of Semi-Supervised Learning")[19]
- Distinguished Paper Award, USENIX 2023 ("Tight Auditing of Differentially Private Machine Learning")[20]
- Best Paper Award, ICML 2024 ("Stealing Part of a Production Language Model")[21]
- Best Paper Award, ICML 2024 ("Considerations for Differentially Private Learning with Large-Scale Public Pretraining")[21]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Nicholas Carlini". nicholas.carlini.com. Archived from the original on June 3, 2024. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ "Nicholas Carlini". AI for Good. Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ "Graduates". people.eecs.berkeley.edu. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ Pujari, Medha; Cherukuri, Bhanu Prakash; Javaid, Ahmad Y; Sun, Weiqing (July 27, 2022). "An Approach to Improve the Robustness of Machine Learning based Intrusion Detection System Models Against the Carlini-Wagner Attack". 2022 IEEE International Conference on Cyber Security and Resilience (CSR). IEEE. pp. 62–67. doi:10.1109/CSR54599.2022.9850306. ISBN 978-1-6654-9952-1. Archived from the original on February 2, 2023. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ Schwab, Katharine (December 12, 2017). "How To Fool A Neural Network". Fast Company. Archived from the original on October 30, 2023. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
- ^ Smith, Craig S. (May 10, 2018). "Alexa and Siri Can Hear This Hidden Command. You Can't". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on January 25, 2021. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ "As voice assistants go mainstream, researchers warn of vulnerabilities". CNET. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ Simonite, Tom. "AI Has a Hallucination Problem That's Proving Tough to Fix". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Archived from the original on June 11, 2023. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ Hutson, Matthew (March 3, 2021). "Robo-writers: the rise and risks of language-generating AI". Nature. 591 (7848): 22–25. Bibcode:2021Natur.591...22H. doi:10.1038/d41586-021-00530-0. PMID 33658699.
- ^ Conover, Emily (February 1, 2024). "AI chatbots can be tricked into misbehaving. Can scientists stop it?". Science News. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
- ^ Metz, Cade (July 27, 2023). "Researchers Poke Holes in Safety Controls of ChatGPT and Other Chatbots". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
- ^ "What does GPT-3 "know" about me?". MIT Technology Review. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
- ^ Edwards, Benj (February 1, 2023). "Paper: Stable Diffusion "memorizes" some images, sparking privacy concerns". Ars Technica. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
- ^ Newman, Lily Hay. "ChatGPT Spit Out Sensitive Data When Told to Repeat 'Poem' Forever". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Archived from the original on July 26, 2024. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
- ^ J. DOE 1 (United states district court northern district of California), Text, archived from the original.
- ^ "The 27th IOCCC". www.ioccc.org. Archived from the original on September 8, 2024. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
- ^ "IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy 2017". www.ieee-security.org. Archived from the original on September 2, 2024. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
- ^ "ICML 2018 Awards". icml.cc. Archived from the original on September 2, 2024. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
- ^ Carlini, Nicholas (2021). "Poisoning the Unlabeled Dataset of {Semi-Supervised} Learning". USENIX Security 2021: 1577–1592. ISBN 978-1-939133-24-3.
- ^ Nasr, Milad; Hayes, Jamie; Steinke, Thomas; Balle, Borja; Tramèr, Florian; Jagielski, Matthew; Carlini, Nicholas; Terzis, Andreas (2023). "Tight Auditing of Differentially Private Machine Learning". USENIX Security 2023: 1631–1648. ISBN 978-1-939133-37-3. Archived from the original on September 8, 2024. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
- ^ a b "ICML 2024 Awards". icml.cc. Archived from the original on September 8, 2024. Retrieved September 2, 2024.