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A First Look at Scams on YouTube

Elijah Bouma-Sims, and Bradley Reaves

Proceedings of the Workshop on Measurements, Attacks, and Defenses for the Web, 2021

Scam videos persist on YouTube for a median of nine months, and metadata alone cannot reliably distinguish scams from legitimate content.

Abstract

YouTube has become the second most popular website according to Alexa, and it represents an enticing platform for scammers to attract victims. Because of the computational difficulty of classifying multimedia, identifying scams on YouTube is more difficult than text-based media. As a consequence, the research community to-date has provided little insight into the prevalence, lifetime, and operational patterns of scammers on YouTube. In this short paper, we present a preliminary exploration of scam videos on YouTube. We begin by identifying 74 search queries likely to lead to scam videos based on the authors’ experience seeing scams during routine browsing. We then manually review and characterize the results to identify 668 scams in 3,700 videos. In a detailed analysis of our classifications and metadata, we find that these scam videos have a median lifetime of nearly nine months, and many rely on external websites for monetization. We also explore the potential of detecting scams from metadata alone, finding that metadata does not have enough predictive power to distinguish scams from legitimate videos. Our work demonstrates that scams are a real problem for YouTube users, motivating future work on this topic.

Citation (IEEE)

E. Bouma-Sims and B. Reaves, “A First Look at Scams on YouTube,” in Proceedings of the Workshop on Measurements, Attacks, and Defenses for the Web, 2021.

BibTeX
@inproceedings{br21,
  author = {{Elijah Bouma{-}Sims} and {Bradley Reaves}},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the Workshop on Measurements, Attacks, and Defenses for the Web},
  date = {2021-02},
  keywords = {short},
  title = {A First Look at Scams on {YouTube}},
}