3 research outputs found
Botnet-based Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Attacks on Web Servers: Classification and Art
Botnets are prevailing mechanisms for the facilitation of the distributed
denial of service (DDoS) attacks on computer networks or applications.
Currently, Botnet-based DDoS attacks on the application layer are latest and
most problematic trends in network security threats. Botnet-based DDoS attacks
on the application layer limits resources, curtails revenue, and yields
customer dissatisfaction, among others. DDoS attacks are among the most
difficult problems to resolve online, especially, when the target is the Web
server. In this paper, we present a comprehensive study to show the danger of
Botnet-based DDoS attacks on application layer, especially on the Web server
and the increased incidents of such attacks that has evidently increased
recently. Botnet-based DDoS attacks incidents and revenue losses of famous
companies and government websites are also described. This provides better
understanding of the problem, current solution space, and future research scope
to defend against such attacks efficiently
Application-layer denial of service attacks: taxonomy and survey
The recent escalation of application-layer denial of service (DoS) attacks has attracted a significant interest of the security research community. Since application-layer DoS attacks usually do not manifest themselves at the network level, they avoid traditional network-layer-based detection. Therefore, the security community has focused on specialised application-layer DoS attacks detection and mitigation mechanisms. However, the deployment of reliable and efficient defence mechanisms against these attacks requires the comprehensive understanding of the existing application-layer DoS attacks supported by a unified terminology. Thus, in this paper we address this issue and devise a taxonomy of application-layer DoS attacks. By devising the proposed taxonomy, we intend to give researchers a better understanding of these attacks and provide a foundation for organising research efforts within this specific field
Denial of Service in Web-Domains: Building Defenses Against Next-Generation Attack Behavior
The existing state-of-the-art in the field of application layer Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) protection is generally designed, and thus effective, only for static web domains. To the best of our knowledge, our work is the first that studies the problem of application layer DDoS defense in web domains of dynamic content and organization, and for next-generation bot behaviour. In the first part of this thesis, we focus on the following research tasks: 1) we identify the main weaknesses of the existing application-layer anti-DDoS solutions as proposed in research literature and in the industry, 2) we obtain a comprehensive picture of the current-day as well as the next-generation application-layer attack behaviour and 3) we propose novel techniques, based on a multidisciplinary approach that combines offline machine learning algorithms and statistical analysis, for detection of suspicious web visitors in static web domains. Then, in the second part of the thesis, we propose and evaluate a novel anti-DDoS system that detects a broad range of application-layer DDoS attacks, both in static and dynamic web domains, through the use of advanced techniques of data mining. The key advantage of our system relative to other systems that resort to the use of challenge-response tests (such as CAPTCHAs) in combating malicious bots is that our system minimizes the number of these tests that are presented to valid human visitors while succeeding in preventing most malicious attackers from accessing the web site. The results of the experimental evaluation of the proposed system demonstrate effective detection of current and future variants of application layer DDoS attacks