SoK: hate, harassment, and the changing landscape of online abuse

Date Issued
2021-05Publisher Version
10.1109/sp40001.2021.00028Author(s)
Thomas, Kurt
Akhawe, Devdatta
Bailey, Michael
Boneh, Dan
Bursztein, Elie
Consolvo, Sunny
Dell, Nicola
Durumeric, Zakir
Kelley, Patrick Gage
Kumar, Deepak
McCoy, Damon
Meiklejohn, Sarah
Ristenpart, Thomas
Stringhini, Gianluca
Metadata
Show full item recordPermanent Link
https://hdl.handle.net/2144/44186Version
Accepted manuscript
Citation (published version)
K. Thomas, D. Akhawe, M. Bailey, D. Boneh, E. Bursztein, S. Consolvo, N. Dell, Z. Durumeric, P.G. Kelley, D. Kumar, D. McCoy, S. Meiklejohn, T. Ristenpart, G. Stringhini. 2021. "SoK: Hate, Harassment, and the Changing Landscape of Online Abuse." 2021 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP). 2021 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP). 2021-05-24 - 2021-05-27. https://doi.org/10.1109/sp40001.2021.00028Abstract
We argue that existing security, privacy, and antiabuse protections fail to address the growing threat of online hate and harassment. In order for our community to understand and address this gap, we propose a taxonomy for reasoning about online hate and harassment. Our taxonomy draws on over 150 interdisciplinary research papers that cover disparate threats ranging from intimate partner violence to coordinated mobs. In the process, we identify seven classes of attacks—such as toxic content and surveillance—that each stem from different attacker capabilities and intents. We also provide longitudinal evidence from a three-year survey that hate and harassment is a pervasive, growing experience for online users, particularly for at-risk communities like young adults and people who identify as LGBTQ+. Responding to each class of hate and harassment requires a unique strategy and we highlight five such potential research directions that ultimately empower individuals, communities, and platforms to do so.
Collections