Abstract

Online social networks have attracted billions of active users over the past decade. These systems play an integral role in the everyday life of many people around the world. As such, these platforms are also attractive for misinformation, hoaxes, and fake news campaigns which usually utilize social trolls and/or social bots for propagation. Detection of so-called social trolls in these platforms is challenging due to their large scale and dynamic nature where users’ data are generated and collected at the scale of multi-billion records per hour. In this paper, we focus on fickle trolls, i.e., a special type of trolling activity in which the trolls change their identity frequently to maximize their social relations. This kind of trolling activity may become irritating for the users and also may pose a serious threat to their privacy. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work that introduces mechanisms to detect these trolls. In particular, we discuss and analyze troll detection mechanisms on different scales. We prove that the order of centralized single-machine detection algorithm is O(n^3) which is slow and impractical for early troll detection in large-scale social platforms comprising of billions of users. We also prove that the streaming approach where data is gradually fed to the system is not practical in many real-world scenarios. In light of such shortcomings, we then propose a massively parallel detection approach. Rigorous evaluations confirm that our proposed method is at least six times faster compared to conventional parallel approaches.

Highlights

  • Online social platforms have become an essential part of human interactions over the past few years

  • We propose a massively parallel approach that is both flexible and scalable to handle an extra-large amount of data that changes over time

  • The focus of these studies ranges from community detection [11,12,13,14,15], social recommender systems [16, 17], social media analysis [18,19,20,21] to misbehaviour and disruptive activities [22,23,24,25]

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Summary

Introduction

Online social platforms have become an essential part of human interactions over the past few years. Many research studies have focused their attention on various aspects and challenges that online social networks face. The focus of these studies ranges from community detection [11,12,13,14,15], social recommender systems [16, 17], social media analysis [18,19,20,21] to misbehaviour and disruptive activities [22,23,24,25].

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