De-anonymizing social networks

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Abstract

Operators of online social networks are increasingly sharing potentially sensitive information about users and their relationships with advertisers, application developers, and data-mining researchers. Privacy is typically protected by anonymization, i.e., removing names, addresses, etc. We present a framework for analyzing privacy and anonymity in social networks and develop a new re-identification algorithm targeting anonymized socialnetwork graphs. To demonstrate its effectiveness on realworld networks, we show that a third of the users who can be verified to have accounts on both Twitter, a popular microblogging service, and Flickr, an online photo-sharing site, can be re-identified in the anonymous Twitter graph with only a 12% error rate. Our de-anonymization algorithm is based purely on the network topology, does not require creation of a large number of dummy "sybil" nodes, is robust to noise and allexisting defenses, and works even when the overlap between the target network and the adversary's auxiliary information is small. © 2009 IEEE.

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APA

Narayanan, A., & Shmatikov, V. (2009). De-anonymizing social networks. In Proceedings - IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (pp. 173–187). https://doi.org/10.1109/SP.2009.22

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