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Introduction to Honeypot, Botnet, and Security Measurement

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Honeypot, Botnet, and Security Measurement"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Honeypot, Botnet, and Security Measurement
Cliff C. Zou 02/07/06

2 What Is a Honeypot? Abstract definition:
“A honeypot is an information system resource whose value lies in unauthorized or illicit use of that resource.” (Lance Spitzner) Concrete definition: “A honeypot is a faked vulnerable system used for the purpose of being attacked, probed, exploited and compromised.”

3 Example of a Simple Honeypot
Install vulnerable OS and software on a machine Install monitor or IDS software Connect to the Internet (with global IP) Wait & monitor being scanned, attacked, compromised Finish analysis, clean the machine

4 Benefit of Deploying Honeypots
Risk mitigation: A deployed honeypot may lure an attacker away from the real production systems (“easy target“). IDS-like functionality: Since no legitimate traffic should take place to or from the honeypot, any traffic appearing is evil and can initiate further actions. Attack analysis: Find out reasons, and strategies why and how you are attacked.

5 Benefit of Deploying Honeypots
Evidence: Once the attacker is identified all data captured may be used in a legal procedure. Increased knowledge: By knowing how you are attacked you are able to enlarge your ability to respond in an appropriate way and to prevent future attacks. Research: Operating and monitoring a honeypot can reveal most up-to-date techniques/exploits and tools used as well as internal communications of the hackers or infection or spreading techniques of worms or viruses.

6 Honeypot Classification
High-interaction honeypots A full and working OS is provided for being attacked VMware virtual environment Several VMware virtual hosts in one physical machine Low-interaction honeypots Only emulate specific network services No real interaction or OS Honeyd Honeynet/honeyfarm A network of honeypots

7 Low-Interaction Honeypots
Pros: Easy to install (simple program) No risk (no vulnerable software to be attacked) One machine supports hundreds of honeypots Cons: No real interaction to be captured Limited logging/monitor function Easily detectable by attackers

8 High-Interaction Honeypots
Pros: Real OS, capture all attack traffic/actions Can discover unknown attacks/vulnerabilites Cons: Time-consuming to build/maintain Time-consuming to analysis attack Risk of being used as stepping stone High computer resource requirement

9 Honeynet A network of honeypots High-interaction honeynet
A distributed network composing many honeypots “Collapsar: A VM-Based Architecture for Network Attack Detention Center”, Usenix’04 Low-interaction honeynet Emulate a virtual network in one physical machine Example: honeyd Mixed honeynet “Scalability, Fidelity and Containment in the Potemkin Virtual Honeyfarm”, presented next week Reference:

10 What Is a Botnet? A network of compromised computers controlled by their attacker Users on zombie machines do not know The main source for many attacks now Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) Extortion spam, phishing Ad-fraud User information: document, keylogger, …

11 How to Build a Botnet? Infect machines via:
Internet worms, viruses virus Backdoor left by previous malware Trojan programs Bots phone back to receive command

12 Botnet Architecture Bot controller
Usually using IRC server (Internet relay chat) Dozen of controllers for robustness bot controller attacker

13 Botnet Monitoring Hijack one of the bot controller
DNS provider redirects domain name to the monitor Still cannot cut off a botnet (dozen of controller) Can obtain most/all bots IP addresses Let honeypots join in a botnet Can monitor all communications No complete picture of a botnet

14 Security Measurement Monitor network traffic to understand/track Internet attack activities Monitor incoming traffic to unused IP space TCP connection requests UDP packets Internet Monitored traffic Unused IP space Local network

15 Refining Monitoring TCP/SYN not enough (IP, port only)
Distinguish different attacks Low-interaction honeypots (honeyd) Obtain the first attack payload by replying SYN/ACK “Internet Motion Sensor” presented next week High-interaction honeypots TCP Reset packets Backscatter from spoofed DoS attack victims “Inferring Internet Denial-of-Service Activity”, presented later

16 Remote fingerprinting
Actively probe remote hosts to identify remote hosts’ OS, physical devices, etc OSes service responses are different Hardware responses are different Purposes: Understand Internet computers Remove DHCP issue in monitored data

17 Data Sharing: Traffic Anonymization
Sharing monitored network traffic is important Collaborative attack detection Academic research Privacy and security exposure in data sharing Packet header: IP address, service port exposure Packet content: more serious Data anonymization Change packet header: preserve IP prefix, and … Change packet content


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