513 research outputs found

    No NAT'd User left Behind: Fingerprinting Users behind NAT from NetFlow Records alone

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    It is generally recognized that the traffic generated by an individual connected to a network acts as his biometric signature. Several tools exploit this fact to fingerprint and monitor users. Often, though, these tools assume to access the entire traffic, including IP addresses and payloads. This is not feasible on the grounds that both performance and privacy would be negatively affected. In reality, most ISPs convert user traffic into NetFlow records for a concise representation that does not include, for instance, any payloads. More importantly, large and distributed networks are usually NAT'd, thus a few IP addresses may be associated to thousands of users. We devised a new fingerprinting framework that overcomes these hurdles. Our system is able to analyze a huge amount of network traffic represented as NetFlows, with the intent to track people. It does so by accurately inferring when users are connected to the network and which IP addresses they are using, even though thousands of users are hidden behind NAT. Our prototype implementation was deployed and tested within an existing large metropolitan WiFi network serving about 200,000 users, with an average load of more than 1,000 users simultaneously connected behind 2 NAT'd IP addresses only. Our solution turned out to be very effective, with an accuracy greater than 90%. We also devised new tools and refined existing ones that may be applied to other contexts related to NetFlow analysis

    Command & Control: Understanding, Denying and Detecting - A review of malware C2 techniques, detection and defences

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    In this survey, we first briefly review the current state of cyber attacks, highlighting significant recent changes in how and why such attacks are performed. We then investigate the mechanics of malware command and control (C2) establishment: we provide a comprehensive review of the techniques used by attackers to set up such a channel and to hide its presence from the attacked parties and the security tools they use. We then switch to the defensive side of the problem, and review approaches that have been proposed for the detection and disruption of C2 channels. We also map such techniques to widely-adopted security controls, emphasizing gaps or limitations (and success stories) in current best practices.Comment: Work commissioned by CPNI, available at c2report.org. 38 pages. Listing abstract compressed from version appearing in repor

    How good can databases deal with Netflow data?

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    Abarca Ortiz, E. (2011). How good can databases deal with Netflow data?. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/14798.Archivo delegad

    CHID : conditional hybrid intrusion detection system for reducing false positives and resource consumption on malicous datasets

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    Inspecting packets to detect intrusions faces challenges when coping with a high volume of network traffic. Packet-based detection processes every payload on the wire, which degrades the performance of network intrusion detection system (NIDS). This issue requires an introduction of a flow-based NIDS that reduces the amount of data to be processed by examining aggregated information of related packets. However, flow-based detection still suffers from the generation of the false positive alerts due to incomplete data input. This study proposed a Conditional Hybrid Intrusion Detection (CHID) by combining the flow-based with packet-based detection. In addition, it is also aimed to improve the resource consumption of the packet-based detection approach. CHID applied attribute wrapper features evaluation algorithms that marked malicious flows for further analysis by the packet-based detection. Input Framework approach was employed for triggering packet flows between the packetbased and flow-based detections. A controlled testbed experiment was conducted to evaluate the performance of detection mechanism’s CHID using datasets obtained from on different traffic rates. The result of the evaluation showed that CHID gains a significant performance improvement in terms of resource consumption and packet drop rate, compared to the default packet-based detection implementation. At a 200 Mbps, CHID in IRC-bot scenario, can reduce 50.6% of memory usage and decreases 18.1% of the CPU utilization without packets drop. CHID approach can mitigate the false positive rate of flow-based detection and reduce the resource consumption of packet-based detection while preserving detection accuracy. CHID approach can be considered as generic system to be applied for monitoring of intrusion detection systems

    Adding Contextual Information to Intrusion Detection Systems Using Fuzzy Cognitive Maps

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    The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.In the last few years there has been considerable increase in the efficiency of Intrusion Detection Systems (IDSs). However, networks are still the victim of attacks. As the complexity of these attacks keeps increasing, new and more robust detection mechanisms need to be developed. The next generation of IDSs should be designed incorporating reasoning engines supported by contextual information about the network, cognitive information and situational awareness to improve their detection results. In this paper, we propose the use of a Fuzzy Cognitive Map (FCM) in conjunction with an IDS to incorporate contextual information into the detection process. We have evaluated the use of FCMs to adjust the Basic Probability Assignment (BPA) values defined prior to the data fusion process, which is crucial for the IDS that we have developed. The experimental results that we present verify that FCMs can improve the efficiency of our IDS by reducing the number of false alarms, while not affecting the number of correct detections

    iTeleScope: Intelligent Video Telemetry and Classification in Real-Time using Software Defined Networking

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    Video continues to dominate network traffic, yet operators today have poor visibility into the number, duration, and resolutions of the video streams traversing their domain. Current approaches are inaccurate, expensive, or unscalable, as they rely on statistical sampling, middle-box hardware, or packet inspection software. We present {\em iTelescope}, the first intelligent, inexpensive, and scalable SDN-based solution for identifying and classifying video flows in real-time. Our solution is novel in combining dynamic flow rules with telemetry and machine learning, and is built on commodity OpenFlow switches and open-source software. We develop a fully functional system, train it in the lab using multiple machine learning algorithms, and validate its performance to show over 95\% accuracy in identifying and classifying video streams from many providers including Youtube and Netflix. Lastly, we conduct tests to demonstrate its scalability to tens of thousands of concurrent streams, and deploy it live on a campus network serving several hundred real users. Our system gives unprecedented fine-grained real-time visibility of video streaming performance to operators of enterprise and carrier networks at very low cost.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figure

    Detecting malware and cyber attacks using ISP data

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