Abstract

Data is continuously generated by modern data sources, and a recent challenge in machine learning has been to develop techniques that perform well in an incremental (streaming) setting. A variety of offline machine learning tasks are known to be feasible under differential privacy, where generic construction exist that, given a large enough input sample, perform tasks such as PAC learning, Empirical Risk Minimization (ERM), regression, etc. In this paper, we investigate the problem of private machine learning, where as common in practice, the data is not given at once, but rather arrives incrementally over time.We introduce the problems of private incremental ERM and private incremental regression where the general goal is to always maintain a good empirical risk minimizer for the history observed under differential privacy. Our first contribution is a generic transformation of private batch ERM mechanisms into private incremental ERM mechanisms, based on a simple idea of invoking the private batch ERM procedure at some regular time intervals. We take this construction as a baseline for comparison. We then provide two mechanisms for the private incremental regression problem. Our first mechanism is based on privately constructing a noisy incremental gradient function, which is then used in a modified projected gradient procedure at every timestep. This mechanism has an excess empirical risk of ≈√d where d the input and constraint set can be used to derive significantly better results for certain interesting regression problems. Our second mechanism which achieves this is based on the idea of projecting the data to a lower dimensional space using random projections, and then adding privacy noise in this low dimensional space. The mechanism overcomes the issues of adaptivity inherent with the use of random projections in online streams, and uses recent developments in high-dimensional estimation to achieve an excess empirical risk bound of ≈ T1/3W2/3, where T is the length of the stream and W is the sum of the Gaussian widths of the input domain and the constraint set that we optimize over.

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