1,652 research outputs found
A Covert Data Transport Protocol
Both enterprise and national firewalls filter network connections. For data
forensics and botnet removal applications, it is important to establish the
information source. In this paper, we describe a data transport layer which
allows a client to transfer encrypted data that provides no discernible
information regarding the data source. We use a domain generation algorithm
(DGA) to encode AES encrypted data into domain names that current tools are
unable to reliably differentiate from valid domain names. The domain names are
registered using (free) dynamic DNS services. The data transmission format is
not vulnerable to Deep Packet Inspection (DPI).Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, conferenc
A First Look at the Crypto-Mining Malware Ecosystem: A Decade of Unrestricted Wealth
Illicit crypto-mining leverages resources stolen from victims to mine
cryptocurrencies on behalf of criminals. While recent works have analyzed one
side of this threat, i.e.: web-browser cryptojacking, only commercial reports
have partially covered binary-based crypto-mining malware. In this paper, we
conduct the largest measurement of crypto-mining malware to date, analyzing
approximately 4.5 million malware samples (1.2 million malicious miners), over
a period of twelve years from 2007 to 2019. Our analysis pipeline applies both
static and dynamic analysis to extract information from the samples, such as
wallet identifiers and mining pools. Together with OSINT data, this information
is used to group samples into campaigns. We then analyze publicly-available
payments sent to the wallets from mining-pools as a reward for mining, and
estimate profits for the different campaigns. All this together is is done in a
fully automated fashion, which enables us to leverage measurement-based
findings of illicit crypto-mining at scale. Our profit analysis reveals
campaigns with multi-million earnings, associating over 4.4% of Monero with
illicit mining. We analyze the infrastructure related with the different
campaigns, showing that a high proportion of this ecosystem is supported by
underground economies such as Pay-Per-Install services. We also uncover novel
techniques that allow criminals to run successful campaigns.Comment: A shorter version of this paper appears in the Proceedings of 19th
ACM Internet Measurement Conference (IMC 2019). This is the full versio
OnionBots: Subverting Privacy Infrastructure for Cyber Attacks
Over the last decade botnets survived by adopting a sequence of increasingly
sophisticated strategies to evade detection and take overs, and to monetize
their infrastructure. At the same time, the success of privacy infrastructures
such as Tor opened the door to illegal activities, including botnets,
ransomware, and a marketplace for drugs and contraband. We contend that the
next waves of botnets will extensively subvert privacy infrastructure and
cryptographic mechanisms. In this work we propose to preemptively investigate
the design and mitigation of such botnets. We first, introduce OnionBots, what
we believe will be the next generation of resilient, stealthy botnets.
OnionBots use privacy infrastructures for cyber attacks by completely
decoupling their operation from the infected host IP address and by carrying
traffic that does not leak information about its source, destination, and
nature. Such bots live symbiotically within the privacy infrastructures to
evade detection, measurement, scale estimation, observation, and in general all
IP-based current mitigation techniques. Furthermore, we show that with an
adequate self-healing network maintenance scheme, that is simple to implement,
OnionBots achieve a low diameter and a low degree and are robust to
partitioning under node deletions. We developed a mitigation technique, called
SOAP, that neutralizes the nodes of the basic OnionBots. We also outline and
discuss a set of techniques that can enable subsequent waves of Super
OnionBots. In light of the potential of such botnets, we believe that the
research community should proactively develop detection and mitigation methods
to thwart OnionBots, potentially making adjustments to privacy infrastructure.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
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