Catch Me If You Can: Deceiving Stance Detection and Geotagging Models to Protect Privacy of Individuals on Twitter

Authors

  • Dilara Dogan TOBB University of Economics and Technology, Ankara, Türkiye
  • Bahadir Altun TOBB University of Economics and Technology, Ankara, Türkiye
  • Muhammed Said Zengin TOBB University of Economics and Technology, Ankara, Türkiye
  • Mucahid Kutlu TOBB University of Economics and Technology, Ankara, Türkiye
  • Tamer Elsayed Qatar University, Doha, Qatar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v17i1.22136

Keywords:

Text categorization; topic recognition; demographic/gender/age identification, Subjectivity in textual data; sentiment analysis; polarity/opinion identification and extraction, linguistic analyses of social media behavior

Abstract

The recent advances in natural language processing have yielded many exciting developments in text analysis and language understanding models; however, these models can also be used to track people, bringing severe privacy concerns. In this work, we investigate what individuals can do to avoid being detected by those models while using social media platforms. We ground our investigation in two exposure-risky tasks, stance detection and geotagging. We explore a variety of simple techniques for modifying text, such as inserting typos in salient words, paraphrasing, and adding dummy social media posts. Our experiments show that the performance of BERT-based models fine-tuned for stance detection decreases significantly due to typos, but it is not affected by paraphrasing. Moreover, we find that typos have minimal impact on state-of-the-art geotagging models due to their increased reliance on social networks; however, we show that users can deceive those models by interacting with different users, reducing their performance by almost 50%.

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Published

2023-06-02

How to Cite

Dogan, D., Altun, B., Zengin, M. S., Kutlu, M., & Elsayed, T. (2023). Catch Me If You Can: Deceiving Stance Detection and Geotagging Models to Protect Privacy of Individuals on Twitter. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 17(1), 173-184. https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v17i1.22136