DocumentCode
64564
Title
DNSRadar: Outsourcing Malicious Domain Detection Based on Distributed Cache-Footprints
Author
Xiaobo Ma ; Junjie Zhang ; Jing Tao ; Jianfeng Li ; Jue Tian ; Xiaohong Guan
Author_Institution
Key Lab. for Intell. Networks & Network Security, Xi´an Jiaotong Univ., Xi´an, China
Volume
9
Issue
11
fYear
2014
fDate
Nov. 2014
Firstpage
1906
Lastpage
1921
Abstract
As the domain name system (DNS) plays a critical role in malicious services and number of networks, especially small enterprise networks and home networks that are generally and poorly managed, grows rapidly, it is highly desired to outsource the malicious domain detection service to a thirdparty system that can aggregate information from multiple vantage points to perform detection. To this end, we propose DNSRadar, a system that explores the coexistence of domain cache-footprints distributed in all networks that participate in the outsourcing service. Bootstrapping from a list of prelabeled malicious domains, DNSRadar leverages link analysis techniques to infer maliciousness likelihood of unknown domains based on coexistence information. As DNSRadar only uses the existence of an unknown domain in a network for detection, privacy concerns have been drastically reduced. Both MapReduce and lightweight matrix analysis techniques are employed to implement DNSRadar, making scalability as a built-in feature. Taking advantage of a large number of open recursive DNS servers, we have performed extensive evaluation at scale. Experimental results have demonstrated that DNSRadar can efficiently detect ~90% malicious domains given a low false positive rate of 1%. Of all these detected malicious domains, ~30% are on average 6 days earlier than public DNS reputation services, indicating DNSRadar´s great early detection capability.
Keywords
IP networks; Internet; cache storage; computer network security; data privacy; matrix algebra; parallel programming; statistical analysis; DNSRadar; Internet; MapReduce; bootstrapping; distributed cache-footprints; domain name system; domain-to-IP translation objective; home networks; link analysis techniques; malicious domain detection service outsourcing; maliciousness likelihood inference; matrix analysis techniques; multiple vantage points; network security; open recursive DNS servers; privacy concerns; small enterprise networks; third-party system; IP networks; Malware; Outsourcing; Privacy; Probes; Scalability; Servers; Domain name system; malicious domain detection; network security; security outsourcing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Forensics and Security, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1556-6013
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIFS.2014.2357251
Filename
6895259
Link To Document