Title :
The malware author testing challenge
Author :
Moni, Tarun ; Salahudeen, Sameer ; Somayaji, Anil
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Comput. Sci., Carleton Univ. Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada
Abstract :
Attackers regularly evaluate anti-malware software to see whether or not their malware will be detected. This attacker-driven anti-malware testing is something defenders would ideally want to limit. Given that anti-malware products must be widely distributed to be commercially viable, it is not feasible to prevent attackers from running them. Here we examine whether it may be possible to instead limit the effectiveness of attacker tests. Specifically, we present a game-theoretic model of anti-malware testing where detection timeliness and coverage are parameters that can be adjusted by anti-malware providers. The less coverage and the slower the response, the harder it is for attackers to determine whether their malware will be detected-and the less protection the software provides to hosts running the anti-malware software. While our results are preliminary, they suggest that it is clearly non-optimal for anti-malware vendors to simply maximize coverage and detection time. As we explain, this result has significant implications for product design and (non-malicious) anti-malware testing methodologies.
Keywords :
invasive software; product design; antimalware products; antimalware software; attacker-driven antimalware testing; detection coverage; detection timeliness; game-theoretic model; malware author testing challenge; product design; Computers; Game theory; Games; Malware; Software; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Anti-malware Testing Research (WATeR), 2014 Second Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Canterbury
DOI :
10.1109/WATeR.2014.7015755