• DocumentCode
    3018431
  • Title

    Fast portscan detection using sequential hypothesis testing

  • Author

    Jung, Jaeyeon ; Paxson, Vern ; Berger, Arthur W. ; Balakrishnan, Hari

  • Author_Institution
    Comput. Sci. & Artificial Intelligence Lab., MIT, USA
  • fYear
    2004
  • fDate
    9-12 May 2004
  • Firstpage
    211
  • Lastpage
    225
  • Abstract
    Attackers routinely perform random portscans of IP addresses to find vulnerable servers to compromise. Network intrusion detection systems (NIDS) attempt to detect such behavior and flag these portscanners as malicious. An important need in such systems is prompt response: the sooner a NIDS detects malice, the lower the resulting damage. At the same time, a NIDS should not falsely implicate benign remote hosts as malicious. Balancing the goals of promptness and accuracy in detecting malicious scanners is a delicate and difficult task. We develop a connection between this problem and the theory of sequential hypothesis testing and show that one can model accesses to local IP addresses as a random walk on one of two stochastic processes, corresponding respectively to the access patterns of benign remote hosts and malicious ones. The detection problem then becomes one of observing a particular trajectory and inferring from it the most likely classification for the remote host. We use this insight to develop TRW (Threshold Random Walk), an online detection algorithm that identifies malicious remote hosts. Using an analysis of traces from two qualitatively different sites, we show that TRW requires a much smaller number of connection attempts (4 or 5 in practice) to detect malicious activity compared to previous schemes, while also providing theoretical bounds on the low (and configurable) probabilities of missed detection and false alarms. In summary, TRW performs significantly faster and also more accurately than other current solutions.
  • Keywords
    Internet; authorisation; computer crime; message authentication; stochastic processes; telecommunication security; IP addresses; access patterns; malicious scanner detection; network intrusion detection systems; online detection algorithm; portscan detection; sequential hypothesis testing; stochastic processes; threshold random walk; trace analysis; Computer science; Internet; Intrusion detection; Laboratories; Network servers; Probes; Reconnaissance; Search engines; Sequential analysis; Web server;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Security and Privacy, 2004. Proceedings. 2004 IEEE Symposium on
  • ISSN
    1081-6011
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-2136-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SECPRI.2004.1301325
  • Filename
    1301325