Abstract
Abstract
Social media is not a neutral channel. How visible information posted online is depends on many factors such as the network structure, the emotional volatility of the content, and the design of the social media platform. In this paper, we use formal methods to study the visibility of agents and information in a social network, as well as how vulnerable the network is to exploitation. We introduce a modal logic to reason about a social network of agents that can follow each other, post, and share information. We show that by imposing some simple rules on the system, a potentially malicious agent can take advantage of the network construction to post an unpopular opinion that may reach many agents. The network is presented both in static and dynamic forms. We prove completeness, expressivity, and model checking problem complexity results for the corresponding logical systems.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Computer Science Applications,Mathematics (miscellaneous)
Reference51 articles.
1. Social media and the public interest: Governance of news platforms in the realm of individual and algorithmic gatekeepers;Napoli;Telecommunications Policy,2015
2. Areces, C. and ten Cate, B. (2007). Hybrid logics. In: Blackburn, P. , van Benthem, J. and Wolter, F. (eds.) Handbook of Modal Logic, Studies in Logic and Practical Reasoning, vol. 3, Elsevier, 821–868.
3. A framework for computing the privacy scores of users in online social networks;Liu;ACM Transactions on Knowledge Discovery from Data,2010
4. A logic for diffusion in social networks;Christoff;Journal of Applied Logic,2015
5. Knowable’ as ‘known after an announcement;Balbiani;Review of Symbolic Logic,2008