[ACM Press the fourth ACM european conference - Nuremberg, Germany (2009.04.01-2009.04.03)] Proceedings of the fourth ACM european conference on Computer systems - EuroSys '09 - User interactions in social networks and their implications
β Scribed by Wilson, Christo; Boe, Bryce; Sala, Alessandra; Puttaswamy, Krishna P.N.; Zhao, Ben Y.
- Book ID
- 111865320
- Publisher
- ACM Press
- Year
- 2009
- Weight
- 366 KB
- Volume
- 0
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 1605584827
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β¦ Synopsis
Social networks are popular platforms for interaction, communication and collaboration between friends. Researchers have recently proposed an emerging class of applications that leverage relationships from social networks to improve security and performance in applications such as email, web browsing and overlay routing. While these applications often cite social network connectivity statistics to support their designs, researchers in psychology and sociology have repeatedly cast doubt on the practice of inferring meaningful relationships from social network connections alone. This leads to the question: Are social links valid indicators of real user interaction? If not, then how can we quantify these factors to form a more accurate model for evaluating sociallyenhanced applications? In this paper, we address this question through a detailed study of user interactions in the Facebook social network. We propose the use of interaction graphs to impart meaning to online social links by quantifying user interactions. We analyze interaction graphs derived from Facebook user traces and show that they exhibit significantly lower levels of the "small-world" properties shown in their social graph counterparts. This means that these graphs have fewer "supernodes" with extremely high degree, and overall network diameter increases significantly as a result. To quantify the impact of our observations, we use both types of graphs to validate two well-known socialbased applications (RE [Garriss 2006] and SybilGuard [Yu 2006]). The results reveal new insights into both systems, and confirm our hypothesis that studies of social applications should use real indicators of user interactions in lieu of social graphs.
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