Abstract
In this paper, we propose two joint network-host based anomaly detection techniques that detect self-propagating malware in real-time by observing deviations from a behavioral model derived from a benign data profile. The proposed malware detection techniques employ perturbations in the distribution of keystrokes that are used to initiate network sessions. We show that the keystrokes' entropy increases and the session-keystroke mutual information decreases when an endpoint is compromised by a self-propagating malware. These two types of perturbations are used for real-time malware detection. The proposed malware detection techniques are further compared with three prominent anomaly detectors, namely the maximum entropy detector, the rate limiting detector and the credit-based threshold random walk detector. We show that the proposed detectors provide considerably higher accuracy with almost 100% detection rates and very low false alarm rates.
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