Přehled o publikaci
2014
Enhancing Network Intrusion Detection by Correlation of Modularly Hashed Sketches
DRAŠAR, Martin; Tomáš JIRSÍK and Martin VIZVÁRYBasic information
Original name
Enhancing Network Intrusion Detection by Correlation of Modularly Hashed Sketches
Authors
DRAŠAR, Martin; Tomáš JIRSÍK and Martin VIZVÁRY
Edition
Berlin, Monitoring and Securing Virtualized Networks and Services, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 8508, p. 160-172, 13 pp. 2014
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Proceedings paper
Field of Study
Informatics
Country of publisher
Germany
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
Publication form
printed version "print"
References:
Marked to be transferred to RIV
Yes
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14610/14:00073230
Organization
Ústav výpočetní techniky – Repository – Repository
ISBN
978-3-662-43861-9
ISSN
UT WoS
Keywords in English
intrusion detection; NetFlow; sketch; modular hashes; correlation
Links
VF20132015031, research and development project.
Changed: 1/9/2020 20:58, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík
Abstract
In the original language
The rapid development of network technologies entails an increase in traffic volume and attack count. The associated increase in computational complexity for methods of deep packet inspection has driven the development of behavioral detection methods. These methods distinguish attackers from valid users by measuring how closely their behavior resembles known anomalous behavior. In real-life deployment, an attacker is flagged only on very close resemblance to avoid false positives. However, many attacks can then go undetected. We believe that this problem can be solved by using more detection methods and then correlating their results. These methods can be set to higher sensitivity, and false positives are then reduced by accepting only attacks reported from more sources. To this end we propose a novel sketch-based method that can detect attackers using a correlation of particular anomaly detections. This is in contrast with the current use of sketch-based methods that focuses on the detection of heavy hitters and heavy changes. We illustrate the potential of our method by detecting attacks on RDP and SSH authentication by correlating four methods detecting the following anomalies: source network scan, destination network scan, abnormal connection count, and low traffic variance. We evaluate our method in terms of detection capabilities compared to other deployed detection methods, hardware requirements, and the attacker’s ability to evade detection.