Better Safe Than Sorry: An Adversarial Approach to Improve Social Bot Detection
This work addresses the ongoing arms race in social bot detection for online platforms, offering a proactive approach to enhance detection systems.
The authors tackled the problem of social bot detection by generating synthetic evolved versions of current social bots using a novel genetic algorithm, and found that these synthetic bots evade existing detection techniques but provide insights to improve them.
The arm race between spambots and spambot-detectors is made of several cycles (or generations): a new wave of spambots is created (and new spam is spread), new spambot filters are derived and old spambots mutate (or evolve) to new species. Recently, with the diffusion of the adversarial learning approach, a new practice is emerging: to manipulate on purpose target samples in order to make stronger detection models. Here, we manipulate generations of Twitter social bots, to obtain - and study - their possible future evolutions, with the aim of eventually deriving more effective detection techniques. In detail, we propose and experiment with a novel genetic algorithm for the synthesis of online accounts. The algorithm allows to create synthetic evolved versions of current state-of-the-art social bots. Results demonstrate that synthetic bots really escape current detection techniques. However, they give all the needed elements to improve such techniques, making possible a proactive approach for the design of social bot detection systems.