Abstract

AbstractInsider threats refer to harmful actions carried out by authorized users within an organization, posing the most damaging risks. The increasing number of these threats has revealed the inadequacy of traditional methods for detecting and mitigating insider threats. These existing approaches lack the ability to analyze activity-related information in detail, resulting in delayed detection of malicious intent. Additionally, current methods lack advancements in addressing noisy datasets or unknown scenarios, leading to under-fitting or over-fitting of the models. To address these, our paper presents a hybrid insider threat detection framework. We not only enhance prediction accuracy by incorporating a layer of statistical criteria on top of machine learning-based classification but also present optimal parameters to address over/under-fitting of models. We evaluate the performance of our framework using a real-life threat test dataset (CERT r4.2) and compare it to existing methods on the same dataset (Glasser and Lindauer 2013). Our initial evaluation demonstrates that our proposed framework achieves an accuracy of 98.48% in detecting insider threats, surpassing the performance of most of the existing methods. Additionally, our framework effectively handles potential bias and data imbalance issues that can arise in real-life scenarios.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call