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Guardians of the Galaxy: Content Moderation in the InterPlanetary File System

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Forthcoming

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Guardians of the Galaxy: Content Moderation in the InterPlanetary File System. / Sokoto, Saidu; Balduf, Leonhard; Trautwein, Dennis et al.
2024. Paper presented at Usenix Security Symposium, PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, United States.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Sokoto, S, Balduf, L, Trautwein, D, Wei, Y, Tyson, G, Castro, I, Ascigil, O, Pavlou, G, Korczynski, M, Scheuermann, B & Król, M 2024, 'Guardians of the Galaxy: Content Moderation in the InterPlanetary File System', Paper presented at Usenix Security Symposium, PHILADELPHIA, United States, 14/08/24 - 16/08/24.

APA

Sokoto, S., Balduf, L., Trautwein, D., Wei, Y., Tyson, G., Castro, I., Ascigil, O., Pavlou, G., Korczynski, M., Scheuermann, B., & Król, M. (in press). Guardians of the Galaxy: Content Moderation in the InterPlanetary File System. Paper presented at Usenix Security Symposium, PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, United States.

Vancouver

Sokoto S, Balduf L, Trautwein D, Wei Y, Tyson G, Castro I et al.. Guardians of the Galaxy: Content Moderation in the InterPlanetary File System. 2024. Paper presented at Usenix Security Symposium, PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, United States.

Author

Sokoto, Saidu ; Balduf, Leonhard ; Trautwein, Dennis et al. / Guardians of the Galaxy: Content Moderation in the InterPlanetary File System. Paper presented at Usenix Security Symposium, PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, United States.

Bibtex

@conference{94c64631eb07498c9fd1c6d157a2de42,
title = "Guardians of the Galaxy: Content Moderation in the InterPlanetary File System",
abstract = "The InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) is one of the largest platforms in the growing “Decentralized Web”. The increasing popularity of IPFS has attracted large volumes of users and content. Unfortunately, some of this content could be considered “problematic”. Content moderation is always hard. With a completely decentralized infrastructure and administration, content moderation in IPFS is even more difficult. In this paper, we examine this challenge. We identify, characterize, and measure the presence of problematic content in IPFS (e.g. subject to takedown notices). Our analysis covers 368,762 files. We analyze the complete content moderation process including how these files are flagged, who hosts and retrieves them. We also measure the efficacy of the process. We analyze content submitted to denylist, showing that notable volumes of problematic content are served, and the lack of a centralized approach facilitates its spread. While we identify fast reactions to takedown requests, we also test the resilience of multiple gateways and show that existing means to filter problematic content can be circumvented. We end by proposing improvements to content moderation that result in 227% increase in the detection of phishing content and reduce the average time to filter such content by 43%.",
author = "Saidu Sokoto and Leonhard Balduf and Dennis Trautwein and Yiluo Wei and Gareth Tyson and Ignacio Castro and Onur Ascigil and George Pavlou and Maciej Korczynski and Bjorn Scheuermann and Micha{\l} Kr{\'o}l",
year = "2024",
month = jun,
day = "2",
language = "English",
note = "Usenix Security Symposium, Usenix Sec ; Conference date: 14-08-2024 Through 16-08-2024",
url = "https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity24",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Guardians of the Galaxy: Content Moderation in the InterPlanetary File System

AU - Sokoto, Saidu

AU - Balduf, Leonhard

AU - Trautwein, Dennis

AU - Wei, Yiluo

AU - Tyson, Gareth

AU - Castro, Ignacio

AU - Ascigil, Onur

AU - Pavlou, George

AU - Korczynski, Maciej

AU - Scheuermann, Bjorn

AU - Król, Michał

PY - 2024/6/2

Y1 - 2024/6/2

N2 - The InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) is one of the largest platforms in the growing “Decentralized Web”. The increasing popularity of IPFS has attracted large volumes of users and content. Unfortunately, some of this content could be considered “problematic”. Content moderation is always hard. With a completely decentralized infrastructure and administration, content moderation in IPFS is even more difficult. In this paper, we examine this challenge. We identify, characterize, and measure the presence of problematic content in IPFS (e.g. subject to takedown notices). Our analysis covers 368,762 files. We analyze the complete content moderation process including how these files are flagged, who hosts and retrieves them. We also measure the efficacy of the process. We analyze content submitted to denylist, showing that notable volumes of problematic content are served, and the lack of a centralized approach facilitates its spread. While we identify fast reactions to takedown requests, we also test the resilience of multiple gateways and show that existing means to filter problematic content can be circumvented. We end by proposing improvements to content moderation that result in 227% increase in the detection of phishing content and reduce the average time to filter such content by 43%.

AB - The InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) is one of the largest platforms in the growing “Decentralized Web”. The increasing popularity of IPFS has attracted large volumes of users and content. Unfortunately, some of this content could be considered “problematic”. Content moderation is always hard. With a completely decentralized infrastructure and administration, content moderation in IPFS is even more difficult. In this paper, we examine this challenge. We identify, characterize, and measure the presence of problematic content in IPFS (e.g. subject to takedown notices). Our analysis covers 368,762 files. We analyze the complete content moderation process including how these files are flagged, who hosts and retrieves them. We also measure the efficacy of the process. We analyze content submitted to denylist, showing that notable volumes of problematic content are served, and the lack of a centralized approach facilitates its spread. While we identify fast reactions to takedown requests, we also test the resilience of multiple gateways and show that existing means to filter problematic content can be circumvented. We end by proposing improvements to content moderation that result in 227% increase in the detection of phishing content and reduce the average time to filter such content by 43%.

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - Usenix Security Symposium

Y2 - 14 August 2024 through 16 August 2024

ER -