Illicit activities and terrorism in cyberspace: an exploratory study in the southeast asian region
PAISI'12 Proceedings of the 2012 Pacific Asia conference on Intelligence and Security Informatics
Sentimental Spidering: Leveraging Opinion Information in Focused Crawlers
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
An analyst-adaptive approach to focused crawlers
Proceedings of the 2013 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining
DiabeticLink: a health big data system for patient empowerment and personalized healthcare
ICSH'13 Proceedings of the 2013 international conference on Smart Health
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The unprecedented growth of the Internet has given rise to the Dark Web, the problematic facet of the Web associated with cybercrime, hate, and extremism. Despite the need for tools to collect and analyze Dark Web forums, the covert nature of this part of the Internet makes traditional Web crawling techniques insufficient for capturing such content. In this study, we propose a novel crawling system designed to collect Dark Web forum content. The system uses a human-assisted accessibility approach to gain access to Dark Web forums. Several URL ordering features and techniques enable efficient extraction of forum postings. The system also includes an incremental crawler coupled with a recall-improvement mechanism intended to facilitate enhanced retrieval and updating of collected content. Experiments conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of the human-assisted accessibility approach and the recall-improvement-based, incremental-update procedure yielded favorable results. The human-assisted approach significantly improved access to Dark Web forums while the incremental crawler with recall improvement also outperformed standard periodic- and incremental-update approaches. Using the system, we were able to collect over 100 Dark Web forums from three regions. A case study encompassing link and content analysis of collected forums was used to illustrate the value and importance of gathering and analyzing content from such online communities. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.