We conceive a model of nanosystems where Co is uniformly, randomly distributed into a CoFe2O4(CFO)matrix, and study the influences of composition and CFO antiferromagnetic exchange coupling(JCFO) on zero-field-cooled/field-cooled magnetization behavior and the dependencies of exchange bias field(HE)and coercivity(HC) on Co/CFO interfacial coupling(JCo/CFO), composition and cooling field(HFC), based on a modified Monte Carlo method. With decreasing temperature, the zero-field-cooled and field-cooled magnetization curves are overlapped and increasing initially, and then splitting at a critical temperature(TP),below which the field-cooled magnetization continues increasing while the zero-field-cooled magnetization exhibits a peak and drops, indicating a magnetically frozen state. A larger JCFOinduces an elevated TP and a reduced magnetization, while the opposite results are obtained by a higher Co occupation fraction(PCo). On the other hand, HEis nonmonotonic with JCo/CFOand the peak decreases and shifts to a lower JCo/CFOvalue for a larger PCo. HCincreases monotonically with increasing JCo/CFO. Moreover, HEis inversely proportional to PCowhen PCovaries from 0.11 to 0.30, indicating the exchange bias is still an interfacial effect. Finally, for a nonzero JCFO, HEmay be suppressed and accompanied by the recovery of HCwith increasing HFC. Otherwise, HCfor zero JCFObecomes high and insensitive to HFC. It is ascribed to the uniform contact between Co and CFO, leading to the Co magnetization reversal and the CFO magnetization precisely controlled by HFC. This work opens a new avenue to control the exchange bias in nanosystems through interfacial randomization.