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Restoring Gaussian Blurred Face Images for Deanonymization Attacks

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arxiv 2506.12344 v1 pith:ZQFILTNT submitted 2025-06-14 cs.CR cs.CV

Restoring Gaussian Blurred Face Images for Deanonymization Attacks

classification cs.CR cs.CV
keywords facegaussianblurblurredfacesmodelusedattacks
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Gaussian blur is widely used to blur human faces in sensitive photos before the photos are posted on the Internet. However, it is unclear to what extent the blurred faces can be restored and used to re-identify the person, especially under a high-blurring setting. In this paper, we explore this question by developing a deblurring method called Revelio. The key intuition is to leverage a generative model's memorization effect and approximate the inverse function of Gaussian blur for face restoration. Compared with existing methods, we design the deblurring process to be identity-preserving. It uses a conditional Diffusion model for preliminary face restoration and then uses an identity retrieval model to retrieve related images to further enhance fidelity. We evaluate Revelio with large public face image datasets and show that it can effectively restore blurred faces, especially under a high-blurring setting. It has a re-identification accuracy of 95.9%, outperforming existing solutions. The result suggests that Gaussian blur should not be used for face anonymization purposes. We also demonstrate the robustness of this method against mismatched Gaussian kernel sizes and functions, and test preliminary countermeasures and adaptive attacks to inspire future work.

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    CAIAMAR employs multi-agent reasoning for context-aware PII anonymization in images, cutting re-identification risks by 73% on benchmarks while maintaining high image quality.