Web spam pages use various techniques to achieve
higher-than-deserved rankings in a search engine’s
results. While human experts can identify
spam, it is too expensive to manually evaluate a
large number of pages. Instead, we propose techniques
to semi-automatically separate reputable,
good pages from spam. We first select a small set
of seed pages to be evaluated by an expert. Once
we manually identify the reputable seed pages, we
use the link structure of the web to discover other
pages that are likely to be good. In this paper
we discuss possible ways to implement the seed
selection and the discovery of good pages. We
present results of experiments run on the World
Wide Web indexed by AltaVista and evaluate the
performance of our techniques. Our results show
that we can effectively filter out spam from a significant
fraction of the web, based on a good seed
set of less than 200 sites.
RawSugar is a social search engine powered by user contributions. We're an online community, with over 170,000 URLs already tagged by our members.
Save and organize your favorite webpages along with your notes to share with your friends and community. Publish your directory with RawSugar patented guided search and earn $$. Learn More
D. Bollegala, Y. Matsuo, and M. Ishizuka. WWW '07: Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web, page 757--766. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2007)
B. Krause, A. Hotho, and G. Stumme. Advances in Information Retrieval, 30th European Conference on IR Research, ECIR 2008, 4956, page 101-113. Springer, (2008)
Y. Yanbe, A. Jatowt, S. Nakamura, and K. Tanaka. JCDL '07: Proceedings of the 7th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries, page 107--116. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2007)
S. Bao, G. Xue, X. Wu, Y. Yu, B. Fei, and Z. Su. WWW '07: Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web, New York, NY, USA, ACM Press, (2007)