Keystroke Biometrics in Response to Fake News Propagation in a Global Pandemic
Entity
UAM. Departamento de Tecnología Electrónica y de las ComunicacionesPublisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. (IEEE)Date
2020-07-17Citation
10.1109/COMPSAC48688.2020.00-26
2020 IEEE 44th Annual Computers, Software, and Applications Conference (COMPSAC). IEEE, 2020. 1604-1609
ISBN
9781728173030DOI
10.1109/COMPSAC48688.2020.00-26Funded by
This work has been supported by projects: PRIMA (MSCA-ITN-2019-860315), TRESPASS (MSCA-ITN-2019-860813), BIBECA (RTI2018-101248-B-I00 MINECO), BioGuard (Ayudas Fundacion BBVA a Equipos de Investigacion Cientıfica 2017). A. Acien and R. Tolosana are supported by a FPI and postdoc fellowship from the Spanish MINECOProject
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/860315/EU/PriMa-ITN; info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/860813/EU/TReSPAsS-ETN; Gobierno de España. RTI2018-101248-B-I00Editor's Version
https://doi.org/10.1109/COMPSAC48688.2020.00-26Subjects
biometric; COVID 19; Fake News; identification; Keystroke; pandemic; TelecomunicacionesNote
© 2020 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other worksRights
© Institute of Electrical and Electronics EngineersAbstract
This work proposes and analyzes the use of keystroke biometrics for content de-anonymization. Fake news have become a powerful tool to manipulate public opinion, especially during major events. In particular, the massive spread of fake news during the COVID-19 pandemic has forced governments and companies to fight against missinformation. In this context, the ability to link multiple accounts or profiles that spread such malicious content on the Internet while hiding in anonymity would enable proactive identification and blacklisting. Behavioral biometrics can be powerful tools in this fight. In this work, we have analyzed how the latest advances in keystroke biometric recognition can help to link behavioral typing patterns in experiments involving 100,000 users and more than 1 million typed sequences. Our proposed system is based on Recurrent Neural Networks adapted to the context of content de-anonymization. Assuming the challenge to link the typed content of a target user in a pool of candidate profiles, our results show that keystroke recognition can be used to reduce the list of candidate profiles by more than 90%. In addition, when keystroke is combined with auxiliary data (such as location), our system achieves a Rank-1 identification performance equal to 52.6% and 10.9% for a background candidate list composed of 1K and 100K profiles, respectively
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Google Scholar:Morales Moreno, Aythami
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Acién Ayala, Alejandro
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Fiérrez Aguilar, Julián
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Monaco, John V.
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Tolosana Moranchel, Rubén
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Vera Rodríguez, Rubén
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Ortega García, Javier
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