English

Quantifying Paedophile Activity in a Large P2P System

Computers and Society 2012-06-20 v1 Networking and Internet Architecture

Abstract

Increasing knowledge of paedophile activity in P2P systems is a crucial societal concern, with important consequences on child protection, policy making, and internet regulation. Because of a lack of traces of P2P exchanges and rigorous analysis methodology, however, current knowledge of this activity remains very limited. We consider here a widely used P2P system, eDonkey, and focus on two key statistics: the fraction of paedophile queries entered in the system and the fraction of users who entered such queries. We collect hundreds of millions of keyword-based queries; we design a paedophile query detection tool for which we establish false positive and false negative rates using assessment by experts; with this tool and these rates, we then estimate the fraction of paedophile queries in our data; finally, we design and apply methods for quantifying users who entered such queries. We conclude that approximately 0.25% of queries are paedophile, and that more than 0.2% of users enter such queries. These statistics are by far the most precise and reliable ever obtained in this domain.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1206.4166,
  title  = {Quantifying Paedophile Activity in a Large P2P System},
  author = {Matthieu Latapy and Clémence Magnien and Raphaël Fournier},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1206.4166},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

In press Information Processing and Management, 2012

R2 v1 2026-06-21T21:21:48.157Z