DocumentCode
75500
Title
SybilBelief: A Semi-Supervised Learning Approach for Structure-Based Sybil Detection
Author
Gong, Neil Zhenqiang ; Frank, Mario ; Mittal, Prateek
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA
Volume
9
Issue
6
fYear
2014
fDate
Jun-14
Firstpage
976
Lastpage
987
Abstract
Sybil attacks are a fundamental threat to the security of distributed systems. Recently, there has been a growing interest in leveraging social networks to mitigate Sybil attacks. However, the existing approaches suffer from one or more drawbacks, including bootstrapping from either only known benign or known Sybil nodes, failing to tolerate noise in their prior knowledge about known benign or Sybil nodes, and not being scalable. In this paper, we aim to overcome these drawbacks. Toward this goal, we introduce SybilBelief, a semi-supervised learning framework, to detect Sybil nodes. SybilBelief takes a social network of the nodes in the system, a small set of known benign nodes, and, optionally, a small set of known Sybils as input. Then, SybilBelief propagates the label information from the known benign and/or Sybil nodes to the remaining nodes in the system. We evaluate SybilBelief using both synthetic and real-world social network topologies. We show that SybilBelief is able to accurately identify Sybil nodes with low false positive rates and low false negative rates. SybilBelief is resilient to noise in our prior knowledge about known benign and Sybil nodes. Moreover, SybilBelief performs orders of magnitudes better than existing Sybil classification mechanisms and significantly better than existing Sybil ranking mechanisms.
Keywords
learning (artificial intelligence); pattern classification; security of data; social networking (online); statistical analysis; Sybil attacks; Sybil classification mechanisms; Sybil nodes; Sybil ranking mechanisms; SybilBelief; benign nodes; bootstrapping; distributed systems; label information; semisupervised learning approach; social network topologies; structure-based Sybil detection; Couplings; Generators; Image edge detection; Noise; Peer-to-peer computing; Random variables; Social network services; Markov random fields; Sybil detection; belief propagation; semi-supervised learning;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Forensics and Security, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1556-6013
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIFS.2014.2316975
Filename
6787042
Link To Document