Transferable Targeted Attacks (TTAs) face significant challenges due to severe overfitting to surrogate models. Recent breakthroughs heavily rely on large-scale training data of victim models, while data-free solutions, i. e. , image transformation-involved gradient optimization, often depend on black-box feedback for method design and tuning. These dependencies violate black-box transfer settings and compromise threat evaluation fairness. In this paper, we propose two blind estimation measures, self-alignment and self-transferability, to analyze per-transformation effectiveness and cross-transformation correlations under strict black-box constraints. Our findings challenge conventional assumptions: (1) Attacking simple scaling transformations uniquely enhances targeted transferability, outperforming other basic transformations and rivaling leading complex methods; (2) Geometric and color transformations exhibit high internal redundancy despite weak inter-category correlations. These insights drive the design and tuning of S ^4 ST (Strong, Self-transferable, faSt, Simple Scale Transformation), which integrates dimensionally consistent scaling, complementary low-redundancy transformations, and block-wise operations. Extensive evaluations across diverse architectures, training distributions, and tasks show that S ^4 ST achieves state-of-the-art effectiveness-efficiency balance without data dependency. We reveal that scaling's effectiveness stems from visual data's multi-scale nature and ubiquitous scale augmentation during training, rendering such augmentation a double-edged sword. Further validations on medical imaging and face verification confirm the framework's strong generalization. Codes are available at https: //github. com/scenarri/S4ST.
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Liu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d893c96c1944d70ce04cef — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tpami.2026.3679507
Yongxiang Liu
Bowen Peng
Li Liu
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
National University of Defense Technology
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