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Description
Query Expansion is a functionality of search engines that suggest a set of related queries for a user issued keyword query. In case of exploratory or ambiguous keyword queries, the main goal of the user would be to identify and select a specific category of query results among different categorical

Query Expansion is a functionality of search engines that suggest a set of related queries for a user issued keyword query. In case of exploratory or ambiguous keyword queries, the main goal of the user would be to identify and select a specific category of query results among different categorical options, in order to narrow down the search and reach the desired result. Typical corpus-driven keyword query expansion approaches return popular words in the results as expanded queries. These empirical methods fail to cover all semantics of categories present in the query results. More importantly these methods do not consider the semantic relationship between the keywords featured in an expanded query. Contrary to a normal keyword search setting, these factors are non-trivial in an exploratory and ambiguous query setting where the user's precise discernment of different categories present in the query results is more important for making subsequent search decisions. In this thesis, I propose a new framework for keyword query expansion: generating a set of queries that correspond to the categorization of original query results, which is referred as Categorizing query expansion. Two approaches of algorithms are proposed, one that performs clustering as pre-processing step and then generates categorizing expanded queries based on the clusters. The other category of algorithms handle the case of generating quality expanded queries in the presence of imperfect clusters.
ContributorsNatarajan, Sivaramakrishnan (Author) / Chen, Yi (Thesis advisor) / Candan, Selcuk (Committee member) / Sen, Arunabha (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2011
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Description
An examination of 12 darkweb sites involved in selling hacking services - often referred to as ”Hacking-as-a-Service” (HaaS) sites is performed. Data is gathered and analyzed for 7 months via weekly site crawling and parsing. In this empirical study, after examining over 200 forum threads, common categories of services available

An examination of 12 darkweb sites involved in selling hacking services - often referred to as ”Hacking-as-a-Service” (HaaS) sites is performed. Data is gathered and analyzed for 7 months via weekly site crawling and parsing. In this empirical study, after examining over 200 forum threads, common categories of services available on HaaS sites are identified as well as their associated topics of conversation. Some of the most common hacking service categories in the HaaS market include Social Media, Database, and Phone hacking. These types of services are the most commonly advertised; found on over 50\% of all HaaS sites, while services related to Malware and Ransomware are advertised on less than 30\% of these sites. Additionally, an analysis is performed on prices of these services along with their volume of demand and comparisons made between the prices listed in posts seeking services with those sites selling services. It is observed that individuals looking to hire hackers for these services are offering to pay premium prices, on average, 73\% more than what the individual hackers are requesting on their own sites. Overall, this study provides insights into illicit markets for contact based hacking especially with regards to services such as social media hacking, email breaches, and website defacement.
ContributorsVincent, Brian W (Author) / Shakarian, Paulo (Thesis advisor) / Candan, Selcuk (Committee member) / Ahn, Gail-Joon (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018