Abstract

<p>In recent times, malware visualization has become very popular for malware<br />classification in cybersecurity. Existing malware features can easily identify<br />known malware that have been already detected, but they cannot identify new<br />and infrequent malwares accurately. Moreover, deep learning algorithms<br />show their power in term of malware classification topic. However, we found<br />the use of imbalanced data; the Malimg database which contains 25 malware<br />families don’t have same or near number of images per class. To address these<br />issues, this paper proposes an effective malware classifier, based on costsensitive deep learning. When performing classification on imbalanced data, some classes get less accuracy than others. Cost-sensitive is meant to solve this issue, however in our case of 25 classes, classical cost-sensitive weights wasn’t effective is giving equal attention to all classes. The proposed approach improves the performance of malware classification, and we demonstrate this improvement using two Convolutional Neural Network models using functional and subclassing programming techniques, based on loss, accuracy, recall and precision.</p>

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