Abstract

This review paper looks at recent research on Federated Learning (FL) for Collaborative Intrusion Detection Systems (CIDS) to establish a taxonomy and survey. The motivation behind this review comes from the difficulty of detecting coordinated cyberattacks in large-scale distributed networks. Collaborative anomalies are one of the network anomalies that need to be detected through robust collaborative learning methods. FL is promising collaborative learning method in recent research. This review aims to offer insights and lesson learn for creating a taxonomy of collaborative anomaly detection in CIDS using FL as a collaborative learning method. Our findings suggest that a taxonomy is required to map the discussion area, including an algorithm for training the learning model, the dataset, global aggregation model, system architecture, security, and privacy. Our results indicate that FL is a promising approach for collaborative anomaly detection in CIDS, and the proposed taxonomy could be useful for future research in this area. Overall, this review contributes to the growing knowledge of FL for CIDS, providing insights and lessons for researchers and practitioners. This research also concludes significant challenges, opportunities, and future directions in CIDS based on collaborative anomaly detection using FL.

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