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Home > Events > 2015 > Understanding the Detection of Fake View Fraud in Video Content Portals
Understanding the Detection of Fake View Fraud in Video Content Portals
16 September 2015 - 11:00am
Speaker(s): 
Miriam Marciel, Early Stage Researcher at NEC Laboratories, Heidelberg, Germany
Location: 

Room 1.1/2 IMDEA Networks Institute, Avda. del Mar Mediterráneo 22, 28918 Leganés – Madrid

Organization: 
NETCOM Research Group (Telematics Engineering Department, UC3M); IMDEA Networks Institute

While substantial effort has been devoted to understand fraudulent activity in traditional online advertising (search and banner), more recent forms such as video ads have received little attention. The understanding and identification of fraudulent activity (i.e., fake views on videos) in video ads for advertisers, is complicated as they rely exclusively on the detection mechanisms deployed by video hosting portals. In this context, the development of independent tools able to monitor and audit the fidelity of these systems are missing today and needed by both industry and regulators. In this paper we present a first set of tools to serve this purpose. Using our tools, we evaluate the performance of the fake view detection systems of five major online video portals. Our results reveal that YouTube’s detection system significantly outperforms all the others. Despite this, a systematic evaluation indicates that it may still be susceptible to simple attacks. Furthermore, we find that YouTube penalizes its users’ public and monetized view counters differently, with the former being more aggressive. In practice, this means that views identified as fake and discounted from the public view-counter are still monetized. We speculate that even though YouTube’s policy puts in lots of effort to compensate users after an attack is discovered, this practice places the burden of the risk on the advertisers, who pay to get their ads displayed.

About Miriam Marciel 

Miriam Marciel received her B.S. and M.S. degrees in Telematics Engineering from Carlos III University of Madrid, in 2012 and 2013 respectively. She was a Ph.D. student at IMDEA Networks between 2012 and 2014. Currently she is an Early Stage Researcher at NEC Laboratories Europe (Heidelberg) under the Marie Curie ITN METRICS.

This event will be conducted in English