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E-grāmata: Deviance in Social Media and Social Cyber Forensics: Uncovering Hidden Relations Using Open Source Information (OSINF)

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Sērija : SpringerBriefs in Cybersecurity
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Apr-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030136901
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Sērija : SpringerBriefs in Cybersecurity
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Apr-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030136901

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This book describes the methodologies and tools used to conduct social cyber forensic analysis. By applying these methodologies and tools on various events observed in the case studies contained within, their effectiveness is highlighted. They blend computational social network analysis and cyber forensic concepts and tools in order to identify and study information competitors.

Through cyber forensic analysis, metadata associated with propaganda-riddled websites are extracted. This metadata assists in extracting social network information such as friends and followers along with communication network information such as networks depicting flows of information among the actors such as tweets, replies, retweets, mentions, and hyperlinks. Through computational social network analysis, the authors identify influential actors and powerful groups coordinating the disinformation campaign. A blended social cyber forensic approach allows them to study cross-media affiliations of the information competitors. For instance, narratives are framed on blogs and YouTube videos, and then Twitter and Reddit, for instance, will be used to disseminate the message. Social cyber forensic methodologies enable researchers to study the role of modern information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the evolution of information campaign and coordination.

In addition to the concepts and methodologies pertaining to social cyber forensics, this book also offers a collection of resources for readers including several datasets that were collected during case studies, up-to-date reference and literature surveys in the domain, and a suite of tools that students, researchers, and practitioners alike can utilize. Most importantly, the book demands a dialogue between information science researchers, public affairs officers, and policy makers to prepare our society to deal with the lawless “wild west” of modern social information systems triggering debates and studies on cyber diplomacy.

Recenzijas

This well-written book is presented in a sequential fashion. Readers with a little knowledge of cybersecurity and cyber forensics will find it very readable. The book should interest managers of social media sites and blog writers, as well as readers with an interest in the social influence of the current slate of popular media sites. (Robert M. Lynch, Computing Reviews, August 26, 2020)

1 Deviance in Social Media 1(26)
1.1 Introduction
1(2)
1.2 Literature on Online Deviant Behaviors
3(10)
1.2.1 Online Deviant Groups
4(4)
1.2.2 Online Deviant Events
8(3)
1.2.3 Online Deviant Tactics
11(2)
1.3 Leveraging the Theory of Collective Action to Study DCFMs
13(9)
1.3.1 The Case of DCFM-Success
16(1)
1.3.2 The Case of DCFM-Failure
17(1)
1.3.3 Conceptual Framework
17(2)
1.3.4 A CFM Scenario
19(3)
References
22(5)
2 Social Network Measures and Analysis 27(18)
2.1 Basics of Graph Theory
27(5)
2.1.1 Graph Data Structures
31(1)
2.2 Fundamentals of Social Network Analysis (SNA)
32(11)
2.2.1 Centrality Measures
34(2)
2.2.2 Triadic Closure and Clustering Coefficient
36(2)
2.2.3 Modularity
38(1)
2.2.4 Influential Blogs and Influential Bloggers
39(2)
2.2.5 Focal Structures Analysis (FSA)
41(2)
References
43(2)
3 Tools and Methodologies for Data Collection, Analysis, and Visualization 45(22)
3.1 TouchGraph SEO Browser
45(2)
3.2 Twitter Archiving Google Sheet (TAGS) and TAGSExplorer
47(1)
3.3 Network Overview, Discovery, and Exploration for Excel (NodeXL)
48(1)
3.4 Gephi
48(3)
3.5 CytoScape
51(1)
3.6 Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC)
51(2)
3.7 Organizational Risk Analyzer (ORA) NetScenes
53(2)
3.8 IBM Watson Analytics
55(2)
3.9 Web Content Extractor (WCE)
57(1)
3.10 Blogtrackers
58(2)
3.11 YouTubeTracker
60(1)
3.12 Botometer
61(1)
3.13 Reaper: Social Media Scraping Tool
62(2)
References
64(3)
4 Social Cyber Forensics (SCF): Uncovering Hidden Relationships 67(12)
4.1 Social Cyber Forensics Analysis (SCF) Using Maltego
67(4)
4.2 Methodologies to Extract Open Source Information
71(2)
4.2.1 Finding Related Websites From Web Tracker Code (WTC)
71(1)
4.2.2 Finding Blog Sites From Twitter Handles
72(1)
4.2.3 Inferring the Ownership or Hidden Connections Among Different Websites
73(1)
4.3 Hands-On Exercises
73(3)
4.3.1 Exercise A
73(2)
4.3.2 Exercise B
75(1)
4.3.3 Exercise C
75(1)
References
76(3)
5 Case Studies of Deviance in Social Media 79(16)
5.1 Introduction
79(3)
5.2 Case Study 1: Propaganda During the 2014 Crimean Water Crisis
82(2)
5.3 Case Study 2: Anti-NATO Propaganda During the 2015 Trident Juncture Exercise
84(3)
5.4 Case Study 3: Anti-NATO Propaganda During the 2015 Dragoon Ride Exercise
87(2)
5.5 Case Study 4: ISIS Beheading Propaganda in 2015
89(3)
References
92(3)
Glossary 95(2)
Index 97
Samer Al-khateeb is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Journalism, Media and Computing, College of Arts and Sciences, at Creighton University and a former Postdoctorate Research Fellow at the Collaboratorium for Social Media and Online Behavioral Studies (COSMOS) at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock (UA-Little Rock). He obtained his Ph.D. in Computer and Information Sciences, a masters degree in Applied Science, and a bachelors degree in Computer Science form UA-Little Rock. He studies deviant acts (e.g., deviant cyber flash mobs and cyber propaganda campaigns) on social media that are conducted by deviant groups (e.g., Daesh, Black-hat hackers, and Propagandist) which aim to influence individuals behaviors and provoke hysteria among citizens. He also studies the type of actors these deviant groups use to perform their acts, i.e., are they human (e.g., Internet trolls) or automated actors (e.g., social bots) by leveraging social science theories (e.g., thetheory of collective action), social network analysis (e.g., centralities and community detection algorithms), and social cyber forensics (e.g., metadata collection to uncover the hidden relations among these actors across platforms). He has many publications including book chapters, journal papers (e.g., Journal of Defence Strategic Communications; Journal of Digital Forensics, Security, and Law; Journal of Baltic Security; and the IARIA International Journal on Advances in Internet Technology), conferences proceedings, and conferences presentations. He won various awards such as the Staff Achievement Award for Educational Achievements, Excellence in Research Award, Outstanding Graduating Student Award (Master's Level), Whos Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges, the Best Paper Award, 2nd Place Most Innovative Award, and 2nd Place Societal Impact Award, among others.





 Dr. Nitin Agarwal is the Jerry L. Maulden-Entergy Endowed Chair and Distinguished Professor of Information Science at University of Arkansas at Little Rock. He is the founding director of the Collaboratorium for Social Media and Online Behavioral Studies (COSMOS) at UA Little Rock. His research aims to push the boundaries of our understanding of cyber social behaviors that emerge and evolve constantly in the modern information and communication platforms with applications in defense and security, health, business and marketing, finance, and education. At COSMOS, he is leading projects funded by over $10 million from an array of federal agencies including U.S. National Science Foundation, Office of Naval Research, Army Research Office, Air Force Research Lab, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Department of State, and plays a significant role in the long-term partnership between UA Little Rock and the Department of Homeland Security. He developed publicly available social media mining tools, viz., Blogtrackers, YouTubeTracker,and Focal Structure Analysis used by NATO Strategic Communications and public affairs, among others. Dr. Agarwal participates in the national Tech Innovation Hub launched by the U.S. Department of State to defeat foreign based propaganda.









Dr. Agarwals research contributions lie at the intersection of social computing, behavior-cultural modeling, collective action, social-cyber forensics, AI, data mining, and machine learning. From Saudi Arabian women's right to drive cyber campaigns to Autism awareness campaigns to ISIS' and anti-West/anti-NATO disinformation campaigns, at COSMOS, he is directing several projects that have made foundational and applicational contributions to social and computational sciences. He has published 8 books and over 150 articles in top-tier peer-reviewed forums with several best paper awards and nominations. Dr. Agarwal obtained Ph.D. from Arizona State University with outstanding dissertation recognition in 2009. He was recognized as one of 'The New Influentials: 20 In Their 20s' by Arkansas Business in 2012. He was recognized with the University-wide Faculty Excellence Award in Research and Creative Endeavors by UALR in 2015. Dr. Agarwal received the Social Media Educator of the Year Award at the 21st International Education and Technology Conference in 2015. In 2017 the Arkansas Times featured Dr. Agarwal in their special issue on "Visionary Arkansans: A Celebration of Arkansans with ideas and achievements of transformative power." Dr. Agarwal was nominated as International Academy, Research and Industry Association (IARIA) Fellow in 2017, Arkansas Academy of Computing (AAoC) Fellow in 2018, and Arkansas Research Alliance (ARA) Fellow in 2018.