Privacy-Preserving Image Features via Adversarial Affine Subspace Embeddings
- Mihai Dusmanu ,
- Johannes L. Schönberger ,
- Sudipta Sinha ,
- Marc Pollefeys
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR 2021) |
Organized by CVF/IEEE
Many computer vision systems require users to upload image features to the cloud for processing and storage. These features can be exploited to recover sensitive information about the scene or subjects, e.g., by reconstructing the appearance of the original image. To address this privacy concern, we propose a new privacy-preserving feature representation. The core idea of our work is to drop constraints from each feature descriptor by embedding it within an affine subspace containing the original feature as well as adversarial feature samples. Feature matching on the privacy preserving representation is enabled based on the notion of subspace-to-subspace distance. We experimentally demonstrate the effectiveness of our method and its high practical relevance for the applications of visual localization and mapping as well as face authentication. Compared to the original features, our approach makes it significantly more difficult for an adversary to recover private information.
Privacy-Preserving Image Features | JRC Workshop 2021
Computer Vision | Day 1 20 April 2021 Speaker: Mihai Dusmanu, ETH Zurich (collaboration with Marc Pollefeys and Johannes Schönberger, Sudipta Sinha, Microsoft) This virtual event brought together the PhD students and postdocs working on collaborative research engagements with Microsoft via the Swiss Joint Research Center, Mixed Reality & AI Zurich Lab, Mixed Reality & AI Cambridge Lab, Inria Joint Center, their academic and Microsoft supervisors as well as the wider research community. The event continued in the tradition of the annual Swiss JRC Workshops. PhD students and postdocs presented project updates and discussed their research with their supervisors and other attendants. In addition, Microsoft speakers provided updates on relevant Microsoft projects and initiatives. There were four event sessions according to research themes: Computer Vision,…