DocumentCode
147349
Title
Testing antivirus engines to determine their effectiveness as a security layer
Author
Haffejee, Jameel ; Irwin, Barry
Author_Institution
Dept. Of Comput. Sci., Rhodes Univ., Grahamstown, South Africa
fYear
2014
fDate
13-14 Aug. 2014
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
This research has been undertaken to empirically test the assumption that it is trivial to bypass an antivirus application and to gauge the effectiveness of antivirus engines when faced with a number of known evasion techniques. A known malicious binary was combined with evasion techniques and deployed against several antivirus engines to test their detection ability. The research also documents the process of setting up an environment for testing antivirus engines as well as building the evasion techniques used in the tests. This environment facilitated the empirical testing that was needed to determine if the assumption that antivirus security controls could easily be bypassed. The results of the empirical tests are also presented in this research and demonstrate that it is indeed within reason that an attacker can evade multiple antivirus engines without much effort. As such while an antivirus application is useful for protecting against known threats, it does not work as effectively against unknown threats.
Keywords
computer viruses; evasion techniques; malicious binary; security layer; testing antivirus engines; Companies; Cryptography; Engines; Malware; Payloads; Testing; Antivirus; Defense; Malware;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Security for South Africa (ISSA), 2014
Conference_Location
Johannesburg
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-3383-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISSA.2014.6950496
Filename
6950496
Link To Document