A Web-Forum Free of Disguised Profanity by Means of Sequence Alignment

Profanity is the use of offensive, obscene or abusive vocables or expressions in public conversations. A big source of conversations in text format nowadays are digital media such as forums, blogs or social networks where malicious users are taking advantage of their ample worldwide coverage to diss...

Full description

Autores:
Tipo de recurso:
article
Fecha de publicación:
2016
Institución:
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
Repositorio:
Repositorio Universidad Javeriana
Idioma:
eng
spa
OAI Identifier:
oai:repository.javeriana.edu.co:10554/25529
Acceso en línea:
http://revistas.javeriana.edu.co/index.php/iyu/article/view/14811
http://hdl.handle.net/10554/25529
Palabra clave:
Rights
openAccess
License
Copyright (c) 2016 Sergio A. Rojas-Galeano, Christian Mogollón
Description
Summary:Profanity is the use of offensive, obscene or abusive vocables or expressions in public conversations. A big source of conversations in text format nowadays are digital media such as forums, blogs or social networks where malicious users are taking advantage of their ample worldwide coverage to disseminate undesired profanity aimed at insulting or denigrating opinions, names or trademarks. Lexicon-based exact comparisons are the most common filter technique within these media; however, ingenious users are disguising profanity using transliteration or masking of the original vocable while still conveying its intended semantic (e.g. by writing piss as P!55 or p.i.s.s), hence defeating the filter. Recent approaches to this problem inspired in the sequence alignment methods from comparative genomics in bioinformatics, have shown promise in preventing overlooking such guises. Building upon those results we have developed an experimental Web forum where user comments are screened against disguised profanity. In this paper we introduce the software (ForumForte) and describe briefly the technique and engineering behind it, as well as some empirical evidence of its filtering performance. Our software is open-source under the New BSD License and is available at: http://tinyurl.com/ForumForte.