Publication | Closed Access
WarningBird: Detecting Suspicious URLs in Twitter Stream.
179
Citations
22
References
2012
Year
Abuse DetectionEngineeringSocial Medium MonitoringInformation SecurityInformation ForensicsText MiningNatural Language ProcessingSpam FilteringComputational Social ScienceSocial MediaInformation RetrievalData ScienceData MiningTwitter StreamSocial Medium MiningThreat DetectionKnowledge DiscoveryComputer ScienceMalware DistributionCrawler EvasionMalicious TweetsArts
Twitter can suffer from malicious tweets containing suspicious URLs for spam, phishing, and malware distribution. Previous Twitter spam detection schemes have used account features such as the ratio of tweets containing URLs and the account creation date, or relation features in the Twitter graph. Malicious users, however, can easily fabricate account features. Moreover, extracting relation features from the Twitter graph is time and resource consuming. Previous suspicious URL detection schemes have classified URLs using several features including lexical features of URLs, URL redirection, HTML content, and dynamic behavior. However, evading techniques exist, such as time-based evasion and crawler evasion. In this paper, we propose WARNINGBIRD, a suspicious URL detection system for Twitter. Instead of focusing on the landing pages of individual URLs in each tweet, we consider correlated redirect chains of URLs in a number of tweets. Because attackers have limited resources and thus have to reuse them, a portion of their redirect chains will be shared. We focus on these shared resources to detect suspicious URLs. We have collected a large number of tweets from the Twitter public timeline and trained a statistical classifier with features derived from correlated URLs and tweet context information. Our classifier has high accuracy and low false-positive and falsenegative rates. We also present WARNINGBIRD as a realtime system for classifying suspicious URLs in the Twitter stream. ∗This research was supported by the MKE (The Ministry of Knowledge Economy), Korea, under the ITRC (Information Technology Research Center) support program supervised by the NIPA (National IT Industry Promotion Agency) (NIPA-2011-C1090-1131-0009) and World Class University program funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology through the National Research Foundation of Korea(R31-10100).
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