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Main Authors: Fotohi, Reza, Aliee, Fereidoon Shams, Farahani, Bahar
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.17485
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author Fotohi, Reza
Aliee, Fereidoon Shams
Farahani, Bahar
author_facet Fotohi, Reza
Aliee, Fereidoon Shams
Farahani, Bahar
contents In Federated Deep Learning (FDL), multiple local enterprises are allowed to train a model jointly. Then, they submit their local updates to the central server, and the server aggregates the updates to create a global model. However, trained models usually perform worse than centralized models, especially when the training data distribution is non-independent and identically distributed (nonIID). NonIID data harms the accuracy and performance of the model. Additionally, due to the centrality of federated learning (FL) and the untrustworthiness of enterprises, traditional FL solutions are vulnerable to security and privacy attacks. To tackle this issue, we propose FedAnil, a secure blockchain enabled Federated Deep Learning Model that improves enterprise models decentralization, performance, and tamper proof properties, incorporating two main phases. The first phase addresses the nonIID challenge (label and feature distribution skew). The second phase addresses security and privacy concerns against poisoning and inference attacks through three steps. Extensive experiments were conducted using the Sent140, FashionMNIST, FEMNIST, and CIFAR10 new real world datasets to evaluate FedAnils robustness and performance. The simulation results demonstrate that FedAnil satisfies FDL privacy preserving requirements. In terms of convergence analysis, the model parameter obtained with FedAnil converges to the optimum of the model parameter. In addition, it performs better in terms of accuracy (more than 11, 15, and 24%) and computation overhead (less than 8, 10, and 15%) compared with baseline approaches, namely ShieldFL, RVPFL, and RFA.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_17485
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Decentralized and Robust Privacy-Preserving Model Using Blockchain-Enabled Federated Deep Learning in Intelligent Enterprises
Fotohi, Reza
Aliee, Fereidoon Shams
Farahani, Bahar
Cryptography and Security
In Federated Deep Learning (FDL), multiple local enterprises are allowed to train a model jointly. Then, they submit their local updates to the central server, and the server aggregates the updates to create a global model. However, trained models usually perform worse than centralized models, especially when the training data distribution is non-independent and identically distributed (nonIID). NonIID data harms the accuracy and performance of the model. Additionally, due to the centrality of federated learning (FL) and the untrustworthiness of enterprises, traditional FL solutions are vulnerable to security and privacy attacks. To tackle this issue, we propose FedAnil, a secure blockchain enabled Federated Deep Learning Model that improves enterprise models decentralization, performance, and tamper proof properties, incorporating two main phases. The first phase addresses the nonIID challenge (label and feature distribution skew). The second phase addresses security and privacy concerns against poisoning and inference attacks through three steps. Extensive experiments were conducted using the Sent140, FashionMNIST, FEMNIST, and CIFAR10 new real world datasets to evaluate FedAnils robustness and performance. The simulation results demonstrate that FedAnil satisfies FDL privacy preserving requirements. In terms of convergence analysis, the model parameter obtained with FedAnil converges to the optimum of the model parameter. In addition, it performs better in terms of accuracy (more than 11, 15, and 24%) and computation overhead (less than 8, 10, and 15%) compared with baseline approaches, namely ShieldFL, RVPFL, and RFA.
title Decentralized and Robust Privacy-Preserving Model Using Blockchain-Enabled Federated Deep Learning in Intelligent Enterprises
topic Cryptography and Security
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.17485