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Identifying video spammers in online social networks
2008
Proceedings of the 4th international workshop on Adversarial information retrieval on the web - AIRWeb '08
In many video social networks, including YouTube, users are permitted to post video responses to other users' videos. Such a response can be legitimate or can be a video response spam, which is a video response whose content is not related to the topic being discussed. Malicious users may post video response spam for several reasons, including increase the popularity of a video, marketing advertisements, distribute pornography, or simply pollute the system. In this paper we consider the problem
doi:10.1145/1451983.1451996
dblp:conf/airweb/BenevenutoRAAZR08
fatcat:tn7kfex6k5hs7mutedcpqvkzeq