• DocumentCode
    3448008
  • Title

    Malicious Spam Emails Developments and Authorship Attribution

  • Author

    Alazab, Mostafa ; Layton, Richard ; Broadhurst, Roderic ; Bouhours, Brigitte

  • Author_Institution
    Australian Nat. Univ., Canberra, ACT, Australia
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    21-22 Nov. 2013
  • Firstpage
    58
  • Lastpage
    68
  • Abstract
    The Internet is a decentralized structure that offers speedy communication, has a global reach and provides anonymity, a characteristic invaluable for committing illegal activities. In parallel with the spread of the Internet, cybercrime has rapidly evolved from a relatively low volume crime to a common high volume crime. A typical example of such a crime is the spreading of spam emails, where the content of the email tries to entice the recipient to click a URL linking to a malicious Web site or downloading a malicious attachment. Analysts attempting to provide intelligence on spam activities quickly find that the volume of spam circulating daily is overwhelming; therefore, any intelligence gathered is representative of only a small sample, not of the global picture. While past studies have looked at automating some of these analyses using topic-based models, i.e. separating email clusters into groups with similar topics, our preliminary research investigates the usefulness of applying authorship-based models for this purpose. In the first phase, we clustered a set of spam emails using an authorship-based clustering algorithm. In the second phase, we analysed those clusters using a set of linguistic, structural and syntactic features. These analyses reveal that emails within each cluster were likely written by the same author, but that it is unlikely we have managed to group together all spam produced by each group. This problem of high purity with low recall, has been faced in past authorship research. While it is also a limitation of our research, the clusters themselves are still useful for the purposes of automating analysis, because they reduce the work needing to be performed. Our second phase revealed useful information on the group that can be utilized in future research for further analysis of such groups, for example, identifying further linkages behind spam campaigns.
  • Keywords
    Internet; Web sites; security of data; unsolicited e-mail; Internet; URL; authorship attribution; authorship based clustering algorithm; cybercrime; illegal activities; linguistic features; malicious Web site; malicious attachment; malicious spam email development; spam activities; spam campaigns; speedy communication; structural features; syntactic features; Clustering algorithms; Computer crime; Computers; Internet; Malware; Unsolicited electronic mail; Attribution; Authorship; Cybercrime; Data Mining.; Malware; Spam;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Cybercrime and Trustworthy Computing Workshop (CTC), 2013 Fourth
  • Conference_Location
    Sydney NSW
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4799-3075-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/CTC.2013.16
  • Filename
    6754642