ITE: Twitter survey is presented in NDSS next month

Institute of Technology and Research (ITE): Old publications at they could reveal too much about you. More than you think, according to a survey released. Tweets could reveal places you visited, and things you did, even if you didn't mention them.

ITE

Researchers from the Institute of Technology and Research (ITE) in Greece and the of Illinois found this out after writing a tool called LPAuditor. The software automatically discovers all publicly available tweet data using a service API.

Using the tool, researchers analyzed metadata, hidden information from each tweet to identify user homes, workplaces, and sensitive places they visited. In dozens of cases, they were able to identify the exact identity of the users, even behind the anonymous Twitter accounts.

In the research that is titled Please Forget Where I Was Last Summer: The Privacy Risks of Public Location (Meta) Data, (PDF) researchers report:

Or even if users are cautious and do not reveal anything in the tweets, the site information can be retrieved which can lead to significant loss of personal data.

Prior to 2015, users simply looking at the Twitter app or the application's website, without knowing it, gave their location and other information. Users did not know the existence of the data because it only appeared on the primary data collected through the API. Although Twitter stopped collecting this data from 2015, the information is still available to the public through the API.

So the researchers were able to obtain GPS coordinates and use commonly available geolocation services to map them to an address. Then, they grouped the tweets that corresponded to the same address, creating clusters of tweets and matching the trends, frequency and timing of the user's tweets from specific locations.

The researchers also mapped the coordinates of users' tweets against other addresses listed on Foursquare. This revealed to them what other locations users could have made the tweets from. Thus they created potentially sensitive clusters (PSC from sensitive clusters) that indicated sensitive sites that users may have visited.

They were able to discover all of the above without even looking at the actual content of the tweets. Only by correlating the metadata could they get a clear picture of what the user did. By searching for phrases such as "at home" or "at work", they could confirm that a location was a home or work address.

Similarly, searching for large keyword lists related to medical, religious, and sexual activities or nightlife activities has been able to confirm that a user is in a sensitive location and deals with a specific activity, even though the tweet did not even mention the place nor his behavior.

Researchers were able to infer more about users than their tweets, and they were able to accurately track many anonymous twitter accounts, according to the PDF.

Twitter allows users to delete their tweets or remove their location data. The but is that the data is publicly available, data "hunters" are likely to already have copies of it.

So deleting location data from Twitter data will not stop someone who wants to find you and knows how.
Researchers will present their study at Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS) next month.

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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