IPTPS '01 Revised Papers from the First International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems
Privacy, economics, and price discrimination on the Internet
ICEC '03 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Electronic commerce
Information revelation and privacy in online social networks
Proceedings of the 2005 ACM workshop on Privacy in the electronic society
Rapid Application Development with Mozilla
Rapid Application Development with Mozilla
Tor: the second-generation onion router
SSYM'04 Proceedings of the 13th conference on USENIX Security Symposium - Volume 13
Examining the impact of website take-down on phishing
Proceedings of the anti-phishing working groups 2nd annual eCrime researchers summit
An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of internet miscreants
Proceedings of the 14th ACM conference on Computer and communications security
Ranking web sites with real user traffic
WSDM '08 Proceedings of the 2008 International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining
Bookmark hierarchies and collaborative recommendation
AAAI'06 proceedings of the 21st national conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
The security cost of cheap user interaction
Proceedings of the 2011 workshop on New security paradigms workshop
Conducting an ethical study of web traffic
CSET'12 Proceedings of the 5th USENIX conference on Cyber Security Experimentation and Test
Pools, clubs and security: designing for a party not a person
Proceedings of the 2012 workshop on New security paradigms
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Net Trust is a fraud-detection application that enhances security while protecting privacy. Net Trust identifies fraudulent Web sites by aggregating individual opinions, user-selected browsing histories, and third-party information. In this paper, we examine the security properties intrinsic to the implementation of the Net Trust ratings system. The ratings system protects against attacks by limiting diffusion of information to those with whom there is an off-line trust relationship. We also propose a richclient/ thin-server implementation architecture and examine the privacy properties of this architecture. The privacy properties function not only to prevent the compromising of user confidentiality, but also to make the ratings system more robust. By utilizing trusted off-line social networks, Net Trust enhances the security and privacy of the ratings data. The implementation architecture maintains high data availability while empowering browser-history owners with final control over data access. The Net Trust analysis we present illustrates the mutual reinforcement of individual privacy (defined as user control over personal information) and security (defined as the resiliency of data confidentiality and the efficacy of the rating system).