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ETRICS
2006

Do You Trust Your Recommendations? An Exploration of Security and Privacy Issues in Recommender Systems

13 years 8 months ago
Do You Trust Your Recommendations? An Exploration of Security and Privacy Issues in Recommender Systems
Recommender systems are widely used to help deal with the problem of information overload. However, recommenders raise serious privacy and security issues. The personal information collected by recommenders raises the risk of unwanted exposure of that information. Also, malicious users can bias or sabotage the recommendations that are provided to other users. This paper raises important research questions in three topics relating to exposure and bias in recommender systems: the value and risks of the preference information shared with a recommender, the effectiveness of shilling attacks designed to bias a recommender, and the issues involved in distributed or peer-to-peer recommenders. The goal of the paper is to bring these questions to the attention of the information and communication security community, to invite their expertise in addressing them.
Shyong K. Lam, Dan Frankowski, John Riedl
Added 22 Aug 2010
Updated 22 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where ETRICS
Authors Shyong K. Lam, Dan Frankowski, John Riedl
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