303 research outputs found
Strengthening Privacy and Cybersecurity through Anonymization and Big Data
L'abstract è presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen
A Detection of Malware Embedded into Web Pages Using Client Honeypot
In today’s Internet world, web pages are facing a severe threat which uses the client-side browser attacks. The vulnerability-based attacks are based on client-side application which becomes the major threat to web pages. The spread of malware uses software vulnerabilities which attack the client application sending request to the server if whether the attack has occurred. This detection is based on client honeypot which detects the various malicious program linked with web pages. Client honeypots are active security devices in search of malicious servers that attack clients. The client honeypot poses as a client and interacts with the server to examine whether an attack has occurred. Often the focus of client honeypots is on web browsers, but any client that interacts with servers can be part of client honeypot. In this research paper, we propose a model of detecting embedded web pages using client honeypot
SoK: A Data-driven View on Methods to Detect Reflective Amplification DDoS Attacks Using Honeypots
In this paper, we revisit the use of honeypots for detecting reflective
amplification attacks. These measurement tools require careful design of both
data collection and data analysis including cautious threshold inference. We
survey common amplification honeypot platforms as well as the underlying
methods to infer attack detection thresholds and to extract knowledge from the
data. By systematically exploring the threshold space, we find most honeypot
platforms produce comparable results despite their different configurations.
Moreover, by applying data from a large-scale honeypot deployment, network
telescopes, and a real-world baseline obtained from a leading DDoS mitigation
provider, we question the fundamental assumption of honeypot research that
convergence of observations can imply their completeness. Conclusively we
derive guidance on precise, reproducible honeypot research, and present open
challenges.Comment: camera-read
State of the Art Botnet-Centric Honeynet Design
The problem of malware has escalated at a rate that security professionals and
researchers have been unable to deal with. Attackers savage the information technology (IT) infrastructure of corporations and governments with impunity. Of particular
significance is the rise of botnets within the past ten years. In response, honeypots
and honeynets were developed to gain critical intelligence on attackers and ultimately
to neutralize their threats. Unfortunately, the malware community has adapted, and
strategies used in the early half of the decade have diminished significantly in their
effectiveness. This thesis explores the design characteristics necessary to create a
honeynet capable of reversing the current trend and defeating botnet countermeasures. This thesis finds that anti-virtual machine detection techniques along with
appropriate failsafes are essential to analyze modern botnet binaries
Analysing web-based malware behaviour through client honeypots
With an increase in the use of the internet, there has been a rise in the number of attacks on servers. These attacks can be successfully defended against using security technologies such as firewalls, IDS and anti-virus software, so attackers have developed new methods to spread their malicious code by using web pages, which can affect many more victims than the traditional approach. The attackers now use these websites to threaten users without the user’s knowledge or permission. The defence against such websites is less effective than traditional security products meaning the attackers have the advantage of being able to target a greater number of users. Malicious web pages attack users through their web browsers and the attack can occur even if the user only visits the web page; this type of attack is called a drive-by download attack. This dissertation explores how web-based attacks work and how users can be protected from this type of attack based on the behaviour of a remote web server. We propose a system that is based on the use of client Honeypot technology. The client Honeypot is able to scan malicious web pages based on their behaviour and can therefore work as an anomaly detection system. The proposed system has three main models: state machine, clustering and prediction models. All these three models work together in order to protect users from known and unknown web-based attacks. This research demonstrates the challenges faced by end users and how the attacker can easily target systems using drive-by download attacks. In this dissertation we discuss how the proposed system works and the research challenges that we are trying to solve, such as how to group web-based attacks into behaviour groups, how to avoid attempts at obfuscation used by attackers and how to predict future malicious behaviour for a given web-based attack based on its behaviour in real time. Finally, we have demonstrate how the proposed system will work by implementing a prototype application and conducting a number of experiments to show how we were able to model, cluster and predict web-based attacks based on their behaviour. The experiment data was collected randomly from online blacklist websites.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
Analysing web-based malware behaviour through client honeypots
With an increase in the use of the internet, there has been a rise in the number of attacks on servers. These attacks can be successfully defended against using security technologies such as firewalls, IDS and anti-virus software, so attackers have developed new methods to spread their malicious code by using web pages, which can affect many more victims than the traditional approach. The attackers now use these websites to threaten users without the user’s knowledge or permission. The defence against such websites is less effective than traditional security products meaning the attackers have the advantage of being able to target a greater number of users. Malicious web pages attack users through their web browsers and the attack can occur even if the user only visits the web page; this type of attack is called a drive-by download attack. This dissertation explores how web-based attacks work and how users can be protected from this type of attack based on the behaviour of a remote web server. We propose a system that is based on the use of client Honeypot technology. The client Honeypot is able to scan malicious web pages based on their behaviour and can therefore work as an anomaly detection system. The proposed system has three main models: state machine, clustering and prediction models. All these three models work together in order to protect users from known and unknown web-based attacks. This research demonstrates the challenges faced by end users and how the attacker can easily target systems using drive-by download attacks. In this dissertation we discuss how the proposed system works and the research challenges that we are trying to solve, such as how to group web-based attacks into behaviour groups, how to avoid attempts at obfuscation used by attackers and how to predict future malicious behaviour for a given web-based attack based on its behaviour in real time. Finally, we have demonstrate how the proposed system will work by implementing a prototype application and conducting a number of experiments to show how we were able to model, cluster and predict web-based attacks based on their behaviour. The experiment data was collected randomly from online blacklist websites.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
Cybersecurity Information Exchange with Privacy (CYBEX-P) and TAHOE – A Cyberthreat Language
Cybersecurity information sharing (CIS) is envisioned to protect organizations more effectively from advanced cyberattacks. However, a completely automated CIS platform is not widely adopted. The major challenges are: (1) the absence of advanced data analytics capabilities and (2) the absence of a robust cyberthreat language (CTL). This work introduces Cybersecurity Information Exchange with Privacy (CYBEX-P), as a CIS framework, to tackle these challenges. CYBEX-P allows organizations to share heterogeneous data from various sources. It correlates the data to automatically generate intuitive reports and defensive rules. To achieve such versatility, we have developed TAHOE - a graph-based CTL. TAHOE is a structure for storing, sharing, and analyzing threat data. It also intrinsically correlates the data. We have further developed a universal Threat Data Query Language (TDQL). In this work, we propose the system architecture for CYBEX-P. We then discuss its scalability along with a protocol to correlate attributes of threat data. We further introduce TAHOE & TDQL as better alternatives to existing CTLs and formulate ThreatRank - an algorithm to detect new malicious events.We have developed CYBEX-P as a complete CIS platform for not only data sharing but also for advanced threat data analysis. To that end, we have developed two frameworks that use CYBEX-P infrastructure as a service (IaaS). The first work is a phishing URL detector that uses machine learning to detect new phishing URLs. This real-time system adapts to the ever-changing landscape of phishing URLs and maintains an accuracy of 86%. The second work models attacker behavior in a botnet. It combines heterogeneous threat data and analyses them together to predict the behavior of an attacker in a host infected by a bot malware. We have achieved a prediction accuracy of 85-97% using our methodology. These two frameworks establish the feasibility of CYBEX-P for advanced threat data analysis for future researchers
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Honeypots in the age of universal attacks and the Internet of Things
Today's Internet connects billions of physical devices. These devices are often immature and insecure, and share common vulnerabilities. The predominant form of attacks relies on recent advances in Internet-wide scanning and device discovery. The speed at which (vulnerable) devices can be discovered, and the device monoculture, mean that a single exploit, potentially trivial, can affect millions of devices across brands and continents.
In an attempt to detect and profile the growing threat of autonomous and Internet-scale attacks against the Internet of Things, we revisit honeypots, resources that appear to be legitimate systems. We show that this endeavour was previously limited by a fundamentally flawed generation of honeypots and associated misconceptions.
We show with two one-year-long studies that the display of warning messages has no deterrent effect in an attacked computer system. Previous research assumed that they would measure individual behaviour, but we find that the number of human attackers is orders of magnitude lower than previously assumed.
Turning to the current generation of low- and medium-interaction honeypots, we demonstrate that their architecture is fatally flawed. The use of off-the-shelf libraries to provide the transport layer means that the protocols are implemented subtly differently from the systems being impersonated. We developed a generic technique which can find any such honeypot at Internet scale with just one packet for an established TCP connection.
We then applied our technique and conducted several Internet-wide scans over a one-year period. By logging in to two SSH honeypots and sending specific commands, we not only revealed their configuration and patch status, but also found that many of them were not up to date. As we were the first to knowingly authenticate to honeypots, we provide a detailed legal analysis and an extended ethical justification for our research to show why we did not infringe computer-misuse laws.
Lastly, we present honware, a honeypot framework for rapid implementation and deployment of high-interaction honeypots. Honware automatically processes a standard firmware image and can emulate a wide range of devices without any access to the manufacturers' hardware. We believe that honware is a major contribution towards re-balancing the economics of attackers and defenders by reducing the period in which attackers can exploit vulnerabilities at Internet scale in a world of ubiquitous networked `things'.Premium Research Studentship, Department of Computer Science and Technology, University of Cambridg
Learning More About the Underground Economy : A Case-Study of Keyloggers and Dropzones
We study an active underground economy that trades stolen digital credentials.We present a method with which it is possible to directly analyze the amount of data harvested through these types of attacks in a highly automated fashion. We exemplify this method by applying it to keylogger-based stealing of credentials via dropzones, anonymous collection points of illicitly collected data. Based on the collected data from more than 70 dropzones, we present the first empirical study of this phenomenon, giving many first-hand details about the attacks that were observed during a seven-month period between April and October 2008. This helps us better understand the nature and size of these quickly emerging underground marketplaces
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