Communications of the ACM - Mobile computing opportunities and challenges
Cheating in online auction - Towards explaining the popularity of English auction
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
Netprobe: a fast and scalable system for fraud detection in online auction networks
Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web
Reducing internet auction fraud
Communications of the ACM - Web searching in a multilingual world
Stylometric Identification in Electronic Markets: Scalability and Robustness
Journal of Management Information Systems
A comparison of fraud cues and classification methods for fake escrow website detection
Information Technology and Management
A proposed data mining approach for internet auction fraud detection
PAISI'07 Proceedings of the 2007 Pacific Asia conference on Intelligence and security informatics
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
Reputation evaluation for choosing a trustworthy counterparty in C2C e-commerce
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
Internet Auction Fraud Detection Using Social Network Analysis and Classification Tree Approaches
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
Detecting fraudulent personalities in networks of online auctioneers
PKDD'06 Proceedings of the 10th European conference on Principle and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases
Online modeling of proactive moderation system for auction fraud detection
Proceedings of the 21st international conference on World Wide Web
Survey: Combating online in-auction fraud: Clues, techniques and challenges
Computer Science Review
Transaction risk management in China-US trade e-markets
Proceedings of the 14th Annual International Conference on Electronic Commerce
An effective early fraud detection method for online auctions
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
Detecting Fake Medical Web Sites Using Recursive Trust Labeling
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Hi-index | 4.10 |
Although online auctions constitute one of the most successful Internet business models, auction fraud has become the largest component of all Internet fraud. Traditional government organizations have joined auction businesses in trying to develop new mechanisms to fight this problem. In parallel with these institutional efforts, various auction communities are waging a less visible, covert war. Unfortunately, these various entities act in unilateral and even contradictory ways that diminish their combined efforts. To resolve this inefficiency, the authors propose empowering auction communities to integrate their work with that of governments and auction institutions.