Paper 2024/2027
Impact Tracing: Identifying the Culprit of Misinformation in Encrypted Messaging Systems
Abstract
Encrypted messaging systems obstruct content moderation, although they provide end-to-end security. As a result, misinformation proliferates in these systems, thereby exacerbating online hate and harassment. The paradigm of ``Reporting-then-Tracing" shows great potential in mitigating the spread of misinformation. For instance, message traceback (CCS'19) traces all the dissemination paths of a message, while source tracing (CCS'21) traces its originator. However, message traceback lacks privacy preservation for non-influential users (e.g., users who only receive the message once), while source tracing maintains privacy but only provides limited traceability. In this paper, we initiate the study of impact tracing. Intuitively, impact tracing traces influential spreaders central to disseminating misinformation while providing privacy protection for non-influential users. We introduce noises to hide non-influential users and demonstrate that these noises do not hinder the identification of influential spreaders. Then, we formally prove our scheme's security and show it achieves differential privacy protection for non-influential users. Additionally, we define three metrics to evaluate its traceability, correctness, and privacy using real-world datasets. The experimental results show that our scheme identifies the most influential spreaders with accuracy from 82% to 99% as the amount of noise varies. Meanwhile, our scheme requires only a 6-byte platform storage overhead for each message while maintaining a low messaging latency (< 0.25ms).
Metadata
- Available format(s)
- Category
- Applications
- Publication info
- Published elsewhere. Major revision. NDSS 2025
- DOI
- 10.14722/ndss.2025.240980
- Keywords
- End-to-end encryptionTracingImpact evaluation
- Contact author(s)
-
zmwang @ cqu edu cn
txiang @ cqu edu cn
csxgli @ cqu edu cn
macrochen @ cqu edu cn
gmyang @ smu edu sg
chuan ma @ cqu edu cn
robertdeng @ smu edu sg - History
- 2024-12-15: approved
- 2024-12-14: received
- See all versions
- Short URL
- https://ia.cr/2024/2027
- License
-
CC BY-NC
BibTeX
@misc{cryptoeprint:2024/2027, author = {Zhongming Wang and Tao Xiang and Xiaoguo Li and Biwen Chen and Guomin Yang and Chuan Ma and Robert H. Deng}, title = {Impact Tracing: Identifying the Culprit of Misinformation in Encrypted Messaging Systems}, howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2024/2027}, year = {2024}, doi = {10.14722/ndss.2025.240980}, url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2024/2027} }