DocumentCode :
2520388
Title :
Sensor in the Dark: Building Untraceable Large-Scale Honeypots Using Virtualization Technologies
Author :
Shimoda, Akihiro ; Mori, Tatsuya ; Goto, Shigeki
Author_Institution :
Comput. Sci. Dept., Waseda Univ., Tokyo, Japan
fYear :
2010
fDate :
19-23 July 2010
Firstpage :
22
Lastpage :
30
Abstract :
A Honeypot is a system that aims to detect and analyze malicious attacks attempted on a network in an interactive manner. Because the primary objective of a honeypot is to detect enemies without being known to them, it is important to hide its existence. However, as several studies have reported, exploiting the unique characteristics of hosts working on a consecutive IP addresses range easily reveals the existence of honeypots. In fact, there exist some anti-honeypot tools that intelligently probe IP address space to locate Internet security sensors including honeypots. In order to tackle this problem, we propose a system called DarkPots, that consists of a large number of virtualized honeypots using unused and nonconsecutive IP addresses in a production network. DarkPots enables us to deploy a large number of honeypots within an active IP space used for a production network; thus detection is difficult using existing probing techniques. In addition, by virtually classifying the unused IP addresses into several groups, DarkPots enables us to perform several monitoring schemes simultaneously. This function is meaningful because we can adopt more than one monitoring schemes and compare their results in an operating network. We design and implement a prototype of DarkPots and empirically evaluate its effectiveness and feasibility by concurrently performing three independent monitoring schemes in a high-speed campus network. The system successfully emulated 7,680 of virtualized honeypots on a backbone link that carries 500 Mbps - 1 Gbps of traffic without affecting legitimate traffic. Our key findings suggest: (1) active and interactive monitoring schemes provide more in-depth insights of malicious attacks, compared to passive monitoring approach in a quantitative way, and (2) randomly distributed allocation of IP addresses has an advantage over the concentrated allocation in that it can collect more information from malwares. These features are crucial in monitoring th- - e security threats.
Keywords :
Internet; computer network security; IP addresses; building untraceable large scale honeypots; interactive monitoring; malicious attacks; probing techniques; security threats; virtualization technologies; IP networks; Internet; Logic gates; Monitoring; Production; Resource management; Servers; honeypot; low-interaction; malware; unused IP address;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Applications and the Internet (SAINT), 2010 10th IEEE/IPSJ International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Seoul
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7526-1
Electronic_ISBN :
978-0-7695-4107-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SAINT.2010.42
Filename :
5598179
Link To Document :
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