Jing Shang (Beijing Jiaotong University), Jian Wang (Beijing Jiaotong University), Kailun Wang (Beijing Jiaotong University), Jiqiang Liu (Beijing Jiaotong University), Nan Jiang (Beijing University of Technology), Md Armanuzzaman (Northeastern University), Ziming Zhao (Northeastern University)

Model pruning is a technique for compressing deep learning models, and using an iterative way to prune the model can achieve better compression effects with lower utility loss. However, our analysis reveals that iterative pruning significantly increases model memorization, making the pruned models more vulnerable to membership inference attacks (MIAs). Unfortunately, the vast majority of existing defenses against MIAs are designed for original and unpruned models. In this paper, we propose a new framework WeMem to weaken memorization in the iterative pruning process. Specifically, our analysis identifies two important factors that increase memorization in iterative pruning, namely data reuse and inherent memorability. We consider the individual and combined impacts of both factors, forming three scenarios that lead to increased memorization in iteratively pruned models. We design three defense primitives based on these factors' characteristics. By combining these primitives, we propose methods tailored to each scenario to weaken memorization effectively. Comprehensive experiments under ten adaptive MIAs demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed defenses. Moreover, our defenses outperform five existing defenses in terms of privacy-utility tradeoff and efficiency. Additionally, we enhance the proposed defenses to automatically adjust settings for optimal defense, improving their practicability.

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Vision: Towards True User-Centric Design for Digital Identity Wallets

Yorick Last (Paderborn University), Patricia Arias Cabarcos (Paderborn University)

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NDSS Symposium 2025 Welcome and Opening Remarks

General Chairs: David Balenson, USC Information Sciences Institute and Heng Yin, University of California, Riverside Program Chairs: Christina Pöpper, New York University Abu Dhabi and Hamed Okhravi, MIT Lincoln Laboratory Artifact Evaluation Chairs: Daniele Cono D’Elia, Sapienza University and Mathy Vanhoef, KU Leuven

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Towards Establishing a Systematic Security Framework for Next Generation...

Tolga O. Atalay (A2 Labs LLC), Tianyuan Yu (UCLA), Lixia Zhang (UCLA), Angelos Stavrou (A2 Labs LLC)

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EMIRIS: Eavesdropping on Iris Information via Electromagnetic Side Channel

Wenhao Li (Shandong University), Jiahao Wang (Shandong University), Guoming Zhang (Shandong University), Yanni Yang (Shandong University), Riccardo Spolaor (Shandong University), Xiuzhen Cheng (Shandong University), Pengfei Hu (Shandong University)

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