Spam filtering in twitter using sender-receiver relationship

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Abstract

Twitter is one of the most visited sites in these days. Twitter spam, however, is constantly increasing. Since Twitter spam is different from traditional spam such as email and blog spam, conventional spam filtering methods are inappropriate to detect it. Thus, many researchers have proposed schemes to detect spammers in Twitter. These schemes are based on the features of spam accounts such as content similarity, age and the ratio of URLs. However, there are two significant problems in using account features to detect spam. First, account features can easily be fabricated by spammers. Second, account features cannot be collected until a number of malicious activities have been done by spammers. This means that spammers will be detected only after they send a number of spam messages. In this paper, we propose a novel spam filtering system that detects spam messages in Twitter. Instead of using account features, we use relation features, such as the distance and connectivity between a message sender and a message receiver, to decide whether the current message is spam or not. Unlike account features, relation features are difficult for spammers to manipulate and can be collected immediately. We collected a large number of spam and non-spam Twitter messages, and then built and compared several classifiers. From our analysis we found that most spam comes from an account that has less relation with a receiver. Also, we show that our scheme is more suitable to detect Twitter spam than the previous schemes. © 2011 Springer-Verlag.

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APA

Song, J., Lee, S., & Kim, J. (2011). Spam filtering in twitter using sender-receiver relationship. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 6961 LNCS, pp. 301–317). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-23644-0_16

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