Pinning Down Abuse on Google Maps
Venue
Proceedings of the International Conference on World Wide Web (WWW) (2017)
Publication Year
2017
Authors
Danny Y. Huang, Doug Grundman, Kurt Thomas, Abhishek Kumar, Elie Bursztein, Kirill Levchenko, Alex C. Snoeren
BibTeX
Abstract
In this paper, we investigate a new form of blackhat search engine optimization
that targets local listing services like Google Maps. Miscreants register abusive
business listings in an attempt to siphon search traffic away from legitimate
businesses and funnel it to deceptive service industries---such as unaccredited
locksmiths---or to traffic-referral scams, often for the restaurant and hotel
industry. In order to understand the prevalence and scope of this threat, we obtain
access to over a hundred-thousand business listings on Google Maps that were
suspended for abuse. We categorize the types of abuse affecting Google Maps;
analyze how miscreants circumvented the protections against fraudulent business
registration such as postcard mail verification; identify the volume of search
queries affected; and ultimately explore how miscreants generated a profit from
traffic that necessitates physical proximity to the victim. This physical
requirement leads to unique abusive behaviors that are distinct from other online
fraud such as pharmaceutical and luxury product scams.