Measuring, Characterizing, and Detecting Facebook Like Farms
Muhammad Ikram, Lucky Onwuzurike, Shehroze Farooqi, Emiliano De, Cristofaro, Arik Friedman, Guillaume Jourjon, Dali Kaafar, M. Zubair Shafiq

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of Facebook like farms, revealing their operational strategies, limitations of current detection methods, and proposing a new timeline-based approach that achieves high accuracy in identifying fake accounts.
Contribution
It systematically compares different like farm types, evaluates Facebook's detection algorithms, and introduces a novel content-based detection method with high precision and recall.
Findings
Some farms are operated by bots and openly reveal their nature.
Stealthier farms mimic regular user behavior over longer periods.
Content analysis features can effectively distinguish fake from genuine accounts.
Abstract
Social networks offer convenient ways to seamlessly reach out to large audiences. In particular, Facebook pages are increasingly used by businesses, brands, and organizations to connect with multitudes of users worldwide. As the number of likes of a page has become a de-facto measure of its popularity and profitability, an underground market of services artificially inflating page likes, aka like farms, has emerged alongside Facebook's official targeted advertising platform. Nonetheless, there is little work that systematically analyzes Facebook pages' promotion methods. Aiming to fill this gap, we present a honeypot-based comparative measurement study of page likes garnered via Facebook advertising and from popular like farms. First, we analyze likes based on demographic, temporal, and social characteristics, and find that some farms seem to be operated by bots and do not really try to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpam and Phishing Detection · Misinformation and Its Impacts · Cybercrime and Law Enforcement Studies
