231
Privacy Bias in Language Models: A Contextual Integrity-based Auditing Metric
arXiv:2409.03735v3 Announce Type: replace
Abstract: As large language models (LLMs) are integrated into sociotechnical systems, it is crucial to examine the privacy biases they exhibit. We define privacy bias as the appropriateness value of information flows in responses from LLMs. A deviation between privacy biases and expected values, referred to as privacy bias delta, may indicate privacy violations. As an auditing metric, privacy bias can help (a) model trainers evaluate the ethical and societal impact of LLMs, (b) service providers select context-appropriate LLMs, and (c) policymakers assess the appropriateness of privacy biases in deployed LLMs. We formulate and answer a novel research question: how can we reliably examine privacy biases in LLMs and the factors that influence them? We present a novel approach for assessing privacy biases using a contextual integrity-based methodology to evaluate the responses from various LLMs. Our approach accounts for the sensitivity of responses across prompt variations, which hinders the evaluation of privacy biases. Finally, we investigate how privacy biases are affected by model capacities and optimizations.
Abstract: As large language models (LLMs) are integrated into sociotechnical systems, it is crucial to examine the privacy biases they exhibit. We define privacy bias as the appropriateness value of information flows in responses from LLMs. A deviation between privacy biases and expected values, referred to as privacy bias delta, may indicate privacy violations. As an auditing metric, privacy bias can help (a) model trainers evaluate the ethical and societal impact of LLMs, (b) service providers select context-appropriate LLMs, and (c) policymakers assess the appropriateness of privacy biases in deployed LLMs. We formulate and answer a novel research question: how can we reliably examine privacy biases in LLMs and the factors that influence them? We present a novel approach for assessing privacy biases using a contextual integrity-based methodology to evaluate the responses from various LLMs. Our approach accounts for the sensitivity of responses across prompt variations, which hinders the evaluation of privacy biases. Finally, we investigate how privacy biases are affected by model capacities and optimizations.