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Towards Secrecy-Aware Attacks Against Trust Prediction in Signed Social Networks

Published 27 Jun 2022 in cs.CR | (2206.13104v2)

Abstract: Signed social networks are widely used to model the trust relationships among online users in security-sensitive systems such as cryptocurrency trading platforms, where trust prediction plays a critical role. In this paper, we investigate how attackers could mislead trust prediction by secretly manipulating signed networks. To this end, we first design effective poisoning attacks against representative trust prediction models. The attacks are formulated as hard bi-level optimization problems, for which we propose several efficient approximation solutions. However, the resulting basic attacks would severely change the structural semantics (in particular, both local and global balance properties) of a signed network, which makes the attacks prone to be detected by the powerful attack detectors we designed. Given this, we further refine the basic attacks by integrating some conflicting metrics as penalty terms into the objective function. The refined attacks become secrecy-aware, i.e., they can successfully evade attack detectors with high probability while sacrificing little attack performance. We conduct comprehensive experiments to demonstrate that the basic attacks can severely disrupt trust prediction but could be easily detected, and the refined attacks perform almost equally well while evading detection. Overall, our results significantly advance the knowledge in designing more practical attacks, reflecting more realistic threats to current trust prediction models. Moreover, the results also provide valuable insights and guidance for building up robust trust prediction systems.

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