Hiding Individuals and Communities in a Social Network
Marcin Waniek, Tomasz Michalak, Talal Rahwan, Michael Wooldridge

TL;DR
This paper explores how individuals and communities can actively modify their social connections to evade detection by social network analysis tools, highlighting practical heuristics and their effectiveness in privacy protection.
Contribution
It introduces methods for individuals and communities to conceal their influence and existence in social networks, including heuristics that are simple yet effective in practice.
Findings
Heuristic rewiring can disguise influential individuals with minimal connection changes.
Communities can increase concealment by strategic unfriending or befriending.
Simple local strategies can significantly improve privacy in social networks.
Abstract
The Internet and social media have fueled enormous interest in social network analysis. New tools continue to be developed and used to analyse our personal connections, with particular emphasis on detecting communities or identifying key individuals in a social network. This raises privacy concerns that are likely to exacerbate in the future. With this in mind, we ask the question: Can individuals or groups actively manage their connections to evade social network analysis tools? By addressing this question, the general public may better protect their privacy, oppressed activist groups may better conceal their existence, and security agencies may better understand how terrorists escape detection. We first study how an individual can evade "network centrality" analysis without compromising his or her influence within the network. We prove that an optimal solution to this problem is…
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