DocumentCode
1592344
Title
As the net churns: Fast-flux botnet observations
Author
Nazario, Jose ; Holz, Thorsten
fYear
2008
Firstpage
24
Lastpage
31
Abstract
While botnets themselves provide a rich platform for financial gain for the botnet master, the use of the infected hosts as webservers can provide an additional botnet use. Botnet herders often use fast-flux DNS techniques to host unwanted or illegal content within a botnet. These techniques change the mapping of the domain name to different bots within the botnet with constant shifting, while the bots simply relay content back to a central server. This can give the attackers additional stepping stones to thwart takedown and can obscure their true origins. Evidence suggests that more attackers are adopting fast-flux techniques, but very little data has been gathered to discover what these botnets are being used for. To address this gap in understanding, we have been mining live traffic to discover new fast-flux domains and then tracking those botnets with active measurements for several months. We identified over 900 fast-flux domain names from early to mid 2008 and monitored their use across the Internet to discern fast-flux botnet behaviors. We found that the active lifetimes of fast-flux botnets vary from less than one day to months, domains that are used in fast-flux operations are often registered but dormant for months prior to activation, that these botnets are associated with a broad range of online fraud and crime activities, and that we can identify distinct botnets across multiple domain names. We support our findings through an in-depth examination of an Internet-scale data continuously collected for hundreds of domain names over several months.
Keywords
Internet; data mining; security of data; Internet- scale data; fast-flux DNS techniques; fast-flux botnet; live traffic mining; net churns; webservers; Access protocols; Availability; Bandwidth; IP networks; Internet; Knowledge management; Monitoring; Network address translation; Relays; Turning;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Malicious and Unwanted Software, 2008. MALWARE 2008. 3rd International Conference on
Conference_Location
Fairfax, VI
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3288-2
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-3289-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MALWARE.2008.4690854
Filename
4690854
Link To Document