Encrypted Neural Networks without Overflows
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 05:17 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A formal verification technique computes certified bounds on all neuron activations to eliminate overflows in CKKS-based encrypted neural network inference.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
CKKS-based encrypted neural networks admit overflow attacks from benign inputs that exceed the design tolerances of the polynomial approximations; a formal verification procedure that computes certified bounds on every neuron activation for all possible inputs removes these overflows by construction and yields failure-free inference on all tested benchmarks.
What carries the argument
A formal verification procedure that computes sound and sufficiently tight bounds on the ranges of all neurons in the network for all possible inputs.
If this is right
- Overflows are eliminated by construction in the encrypted circuit.
- Observed failure rates drop from up to 47 percent to zero across all benchmarks.
- Existing CKKS frameworks can adopt the method by substituting standard polynomials with ones whose ranges match the certified neuron bounds.
- Private inference remains functional for every input without producing unusable outputs.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same bound-computation method could be applied to other range-constrained homomorphic schemes beyond CKKS.
- Integrating the verification step into the training loop might produce networks whose activations are easier to bound tightly.
- Adversarial input generation could be used to test whether the certified bounds are tight enough in practice.
Load-bearing premise
The formal verification procedure produces sound and sufficiently tight bounds on every neuron activation for all possible inputs the network may receive.
What would settle it
An input drawn from the assumed input domain that still produces an overflow or corrupt output after the certified bounds are used to select the approximation polynomials.
Figures
read the original abstract
Fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) enables private inference by evaluating neural networks on encrypted data. In this way, we can delegate the computation to a third party server without ever revealing the user's data. Currently, the CKKS scheme is the backbone of most efficient FHE implementations, but it only supports addition, multiplication, and array rotation operations, thus requiring all activation functions of the neural network to be approximated by polynomials within a certain interval, imposing strict design tolerances. In this paper, we demonstrate for the first time that this scheme is vulnerable to overflow attacks, i.e., seemingly benign inputs that can exceed such tolerances of the FHE circuit, thereby causing corrupt and unusable outputs. To avoid them, we propose a formal verification technique that computes certified bounds on the ranges of all neurons in the network. By construction, our method eliminates overflows and, in our experiments, removed observed overflows on all benchmarks, reducing failure rates from up to 47% to 0%. Moreover, our overflow-free solution is compatible with most CKKS-based frameworks, as it allows to simply substitute standard polynomials by polynomials with rigorously designed ranges.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper identifies that CKKS-based FHE neural network inference is vulnerable to overflow attacks, where inputs cause neuron activations to exceed the intervals for which activation polynomials were fitted, producing corrupt outputs (failure rates up to 47%). It proposes a formal verification procedure that computes certified bounds on all neuron ranges from the network structure and activation intervals; these bounds are then used to select or design polynomials whose ranges provably contain the activations, eliminating overflows by construction. Experiments on benchmarks show the method reduces observed failure rates to 0% while remaining compatible with existing CKKS frameworks via simple polynomial substitution.
Significance. If the verification procedure is sound for the substituted polynomials and all admissible inputs, the result is significant: it supplies the first systematic defense against a concrete correctness attack on practical FHE-ML pipelines. The 'by construction' guarantee and framework compatibility are practical strengths that could be adopted without redesigning existing encrypted-inference stacks.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract / §3] Abstract (technique paragraph) and §3 (verification procedure): the central 'by construction' claim requires that the certified bounds remain valid after each activation is replaced by its polynomial approximant. The description does not state whether interval or abstract-interpretation propagation is performed on the original network or on the network containing the chosen polynomials; if the former, soundness does not transfer to the deployed circuit.
- [Abstract / Experiments] Abstract (experiments paragraph): the reported 0% failure rate is obtained on 'all benchmarks,' yet no explicit statement appears that the test inputs were drawn from (or exhaustively cover) the input domain used to compute the certified neuron bounds. Without this link, the experimental result does not confirm that the verification is tight enough for the inputs the network may actually receive.
- [§4] §4 (bound computation): the method is said to derive bounds 'from the network structure and activation intervals independently.' If the activation intervals themselves are obtained from the original (non-polynomial) network, the substitution step may enlarge the reachable ranges, violating the claimed independence and the overflow-free guarantee.
minor comments (2)
- [Notation] Notation for the certified bounds (e.g., lower/upper symbols) is introduced without a consolidated table; a single reference table would improve readability.
- [Abstract] The abstract states 'reducing failure rates from up to 47% to 0%' but does not name the benchmark or input distribution that produced the 47% figure; adding this detail would strengthen the comparison.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their thorough review and valuable comments. The points raised concern the clarity of the soundness argument and experimental validation. We address each major comment below and will revise the manuscript where needed to improve precision.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract / §3] Abstract (technique paragraph) and §3 (verification procedure): the central 'by construction' claim requires that the certified bounds remain valid after each activation is replaced by its polynomial approximant. The description does not state whether interval or abstract-interpretation propagation is performed on the original network or on the network containing the chosen polynomials; if the former, soundness does not transfer to the deployed circuit.
Authors: We agree the description of the verification procedure leaves the network on which bounds are computed implicit. The certified bounds are obtained by propagating the activation intervals (i.e., the fitting domains of the chosen polynomials) through the network structure; the polynomials are subsequently selected to cover exactly those ranges. This construction ensures that, in the deployed circuit, every polynomial receives an input inside its certified interval. To remove ambiguity, we will revise the abstract and §3 to state explicitly that interval propagation uses the polynomial domains and that the resulting bounds therefore apply directly to the substituted circuit. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract / Experiments] Abstract (experiments paragraph): the reported 0% failure rate is obtained on 'all benchmarks,' yet no explicit statement appears that the test inputs were drawn from (or exhaustively cover) the input domain used to compute the certified neuron bounds. Without this link, the experimental result does not confirm that the verification is tight enough for the inputs the network may actually receive.
Authors: The test inputs in the reported experiments are drawn from the same input domain that is assumed when computing the certified neuron bounds. We will add an explicit statement in the experiments section (and, space permitting, the abstract) confirming that every test input respects the input-domain assumptions used for bound certification, thereby linking the observed 0% failure rate to the verified guarantee. revision: yes
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Referee: [§4] §4 (bound computation): the method is said to derive bounds 'from the network structure and activation intervals independently.' If the activation intervals themselves are obtained from the original (non-polynomial) network, the substitution step may enlarge the reachable ranges, violating the claimed independence and the overflow-free guarantee.
Authors: The activation intervals used in §4 are the predefined fitting intervals of the polynomial approximants; they are chosen independently of any concrete execution of the original network. Bounds are then derived solely from the network topology and these intervals. Because the polynomials are required to match the activation only inside the certified ranges, substitution cannot push subsequent neurons outside those ranges. We will revise §4 to state this independence explicitly and to emphasize that the intervals belong to the approximants rather than the original activations. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; bounds derived independently of polynomial fits
full rationale
The paper's derivation chain relies on a formal verification procedure that computes certified bounds on neuron activations from the network structure and input intervals. These bounds are then used to select polynomial ranges for activations. No quote shows the bounds being defined in terms of the fitted polynomials, nor any fitted input renamed as prediction, self-citation load-bearing the central claim, or ansatz smuggled via citation. The 'by construction' guarantee follows from substituting polynomials whose ranges are set to the verified bounds, without reducing to the inputs by definition. This is the most common honest non-finding.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
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