Abstract
E-commerce is the fastest-growing segment of the economy. Online reviews play a crucial role in helping consumers evaluate and compare products and services. As a result, fake reviews (opinion spam) are becoming more prevalent and negatively impacting customers and service providers. There are many reasons why it is hard to identify opinion spammers automatically, including the absence of reliable labeled data. This limitation precludes an off-the-shelf application of a machine learning pipeline. We propose a new method for classifying reviewers as spammers or benign, combining machine learning with a message-passing algorithm that capitalizes on the users' graph structure to compensate for the possible scarcity of labeled data. We devise a new way of sampling the labels for the training step (active learning), replacing the typical uniform sampling. Experiments on three large real-world datasets from Yelp.com show that our method outperforms state-of-the-art active learning approaches and also machine learning methods that use a much larger set of labeled data for training.
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More From: Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media
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