The epidemic spread of fake news is a side effect of the expansion of social networks to circulate news, in contrast to traditional mass media such as newspapers, magazines, radio, and television. Human inefficiency to distinguish between true and false facts exposes fake news as a threat to logical truth, democracy, journalism, and credibility in government institutions. In this paper, we survey methods for preprocessing data in natural language, vectorization, dimensionality reduction, machine learning, and quality assessment of information retrieval. We also contextualize the identification of fake news, and we discuss research initiatives and opportunities.
Identifying a network misuse takes days or even weeks, and network administrators usually neglect zero-day threats until a large number of malicious users exploit them. Besides, security applications, such as anomaly detection and attack mitigation systems, must apply real-time monitoring to reduce the impacts of security incidents. Thus, information processing time should be as small as possible to enable an effective defense against attacks. In this paper, we present a fast preprocessing method for network traffic classification based on feature correlation and feature normalization. Our proposed method couples a normalization and a feature selection algorithms. We evaluate the proposed algorithms against three different datasets for eight different machine learning classification algorithms. Our proposed normalization algorithm reduces the classification error rate when compared with traditional methods. Our Feature Selection algorithm chooses an optimized subset of features improving accuracy by more than 11% within a 100-fold reduction in processing time when compared to traditional feature selection and feature reduction algorithms. The preprocessing method is performed in batch and streaming data, being able to detect concept-drift.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.