DocumentCode
2753988
Title
A Collusion-Resistant Automation Scheme for Social Moderation Systems
Author
Lou, Jing-Kai ; Chen, Kuan-Ta ; Lei, Chin-Laung
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Nat. Taiwan Univ., Taipei
fYear
2009
fDate
10-13 Jan. 2009
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
5
Abstract
For current Web 2.0 services, manual examination of user uploaded content is normally required to ensure its legitimacy and appropriateness, which is a substantial burden to service providers. To reduce labor costs and the delays caused by content censoring, social moderation has been proposed as a front-line mechanism, whereby user moderators are encouraged to examine content before system moderation is required. Given the immerse amount of new content added to the Web each day, there is a need for automation schemes to facilitate rear system moderation. This kind of mechanism is expected to automatically summarize reports from user moderators and ban misbehaving users or remove inappropriate content whenever possible. However, the accuracy of such schemes may be reduced by collusion attacks, where some work together to mislead the automatic summarization in order to obtain shared benefits. In this paper, we propose a collusion-resistant automation scheme for social moderation systems. Because some user moderators may collude and dishonestly claim that a user misbehaves, our scheme detects whether an accusation from a user moderator is fair or malicious based on the structure of mutual accusations of all users in the system. Through simulations we show that collusion attacks are likely to succeed if an intuitive count- based automation scheme is used. The proposed scheme, which is based on the community structure of the user accusation graph, achieves a decent performance in most scenarios.
Keywords
Internet; Web services; security of data; Internet; Web 2.0 services; collusion attacks; collusion-resistant automation scheme; front-line mechanism; social moderation systems; user accusation graph; user moderator; Automation; Costs; Delay; Information science; Internet; MySpace; Video sharing; Wikipedia; Writing; YouTube;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Consumer Communications and Networking Conference, 2009. CCNC 2009. 6th IEEE
Conference_Location
Las Vegas, NV
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2308-8
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-2309-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCNC.2009.4784911
Filename
4784911
Link To Document