首页|New Machine Learning Study Findings Reported from Macquarie University (Investigating Evasive Techniques in SMS Spam Filtering: A Comparative Analysis of Machine Learning Models)
New Machine Learning Study Findings Reported from Macquarie University (Investigating Evasive Techniques in SMS Spam Filtering: A Comparative Analysis of Machine Learning Models)
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By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Robotics & Machine Learning Daily News Daily News-Fresh data on artificial intelligence are presented in a new report. According to news originating from Sydney, Australia, by NewsRx correspondents, research stated, "The persistence of SMS spam remains a significant challenge, highlighting the need for research aimed at developing systems capable of effectively handling the evasive strategies used by spammers. Such research efforts are important for safeguarding the general public from the detrimental impact of SMS spam." Our news editors obtained a quote from the research from Macquarie University: "In this study, we aim to highlight the challenges encountered in the current landscape of SMS spam detection and filtering. To address these challenges, we present a new SMS dataset comprising more than 68K SMS messages with 61% legitimate (ham) SMS and 39% spam messages. Notably, this dataset, we release for further research, represents the largest publicly available SMS spam dataset to date. To characterize the dataset, we perform a longitudinal analysis of spam evolution. We then extract semantic and syntactic features to evaluate and compare the performance of well-known machine learning based SMS spam detection methods, ranging from shallow machine learning approaches to advanced deep neural networks. We investigate the robustness of existing SMS spam detection models and popular anti-spam services against spammers' evasion techniques. Our findings reveal that the majority of shallow machine learning based techniques and anti-spam services exhibit inadequate performance when it comes to accurately classifying SMS spam messages."
Macquarie UniversitySydneyAustraliaAustralia and New ZealandCyborgsEmerging TechnologiesMachine Learning