Volumetric Distributed Denial of Service attacks forcefully disrupt the availability of online services by congesting network links with arbitrary high-volume traffic. This brute force approach has collateral impact on the upstream network infrastructure, making early attack traffic removal a key objective. To reduce infrastructure load and maintain service availability, we introduce ReCEIF, a topology-independent mitigation strategy for early, rule-based ingress filtering leveraging deep reinforcement learning. ReCEIF utilizes hierarchical heavy hitters to monitor traffic distribution and detect subnets that are sending high-volume traffic. Deep reinforcement learning subsequently serves to refine hierarchical heavy hitters into effective filter rules that can be propagated upstream to discard traffic originating from attacking systems. Evaluating all filter rules requires only a single clock cycle when utilizing fast ternary content-addressable memory, which is commonly available in software defined networks. To outline the effectiveness of our approach, we conduct a comparative evaluation to reinforcement learning-based router throttling.
Authored by Hauke Heseding, Martina Zitterbart
DDoS attacks are usually accompanied by IP spoofing, but the availability of existing DDoS defense systems for high-speed networks decreases when facing DDoS attacks with IP spoofing. Although IP traceback technologies are proposed to focus on IP spoofing in DDoS attacks, there are problems in practical application such as the need to change existing protocols and extensive infrastructure support. To defend against DDoS attacks under IP spoofing in high-speed networks, we propose a novel DDoS defense system, IM-Shield. IM-Shield uses the address pair consisting of the upper router interface MAC address and the destination IP address for DDoS attack detection. IM-Shield implements fine-grained defense against DDoS attacks under IP spoofing by filtering the address pairs of attack traffic without requiring protocol and infrastructure extensions to be applied on the Internet. Detection experiments using the public dataset show that in a 10Gbps high-speed network, the detection precision of IM-Shield for DDoS attacks under IP spoofing is higher than 99.9%; and defense experiments simulating real-time processing in a 10Gbps high-speed network show that IM-Shield can effectively defend against DDoS attacks under IP spoofing.
Authored by Hua Wu, Xuange Zhang, Tingzheng Chen, Guang Cheng, Xiaoyan Hu
Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) is expected for widespread deployment worldwide. Such rapid development of IPv6 may lead to safety problems. The main threats in IPv6 networks are denial of service (DoS) attacks and distributed DoS (DDoS) attacks. In addition to the similar threats in Internet Protocol Version 4 (IPv4), IPv6 has introduced new potential vulnerabilities, which are DoS and DDoS attacks based on Internet Control Message Protocol version 6 (ICMPv6). We divide such new attacks into two categories: pure flooding attacks and source address spoofing attacks. We propose P4-NSAF, a scheme to defend against the above two IPv6 DoS and DDoS attacks in the programmable data plane. P4-NSAF uses Count-Min Sketch to defend against flooding attacks and records information about IPv6 agents into match tables to prevent source address spoofing attacks. We implement a prototype of P4-NSAF with P4 and evaluate it in the programmable data plane. The result suggests that P4-NSAF can effectively protect IPv6 networks from DoS and DDoS attacks based on ICMPv6.
Authored by Yubing Li, Wei Yang, Zhou Zhou, Qingyun Liu, Zhao Li, Shu Li
Protecting an identity of IPv6 packet against Denial-of-Service (DoS) attack, depend on the proposed methods of cryptography and steganography. Reliable communication using the security aspect is the most visible issue, particularly in IPv6 network applications. Problems such as DoS attacks, IP spoofing and other kinds of passive attacks are common. This paper suggests an approach based on generating a randomly unique identities for every node. The generated identity is encrypted and hided in the transmitted packets of the sender side. In the receiver side, the received packet verified to identify the source before processed. Also, the paper involves implementing nine experiments that are used to test the proposed scheme. The scheme is based on creating the address of IPv6, then passing it to the logistics map then encrypted by RSA and authenticated by SHA2. In addition, network performance is computed by OPNET modular. The results showed better computation power consumption in case of lost packet, average events, memory and time, and the better results as total memory is 35,523 KB, average events/sec is 250,52, traffic sent is 30,324 packets/sec, traffic received is 27,227 packets/sec, and lose packets is 3,097 packets/sec.
Authored by Maytham Ali, Saif Al-Alak
An often overlooked but equally important aspect of unmanned aerial system (UAS) design is the security of their networking protocols and how they deal with cyberattacks. In this context, cyberattacks are malicious attempts to monitor or modify incoming and outgoing data from the system. These attacks could target anywhere in the system where a transfer of data occurs but are most common in the transfer of data between the control station and the UAS. A compromise in the networking system of a UAS could result in a variety of issues including increased network latency between the control station and the UAS, temporary loss of control over the UAS, or a complete loss of the UAS. A complete loss of the system could result in the UAS being disabled, crashing, or the attacker overtaking command and control of the platform, all of which would be done with little to no alert to the operator. Fortunately, the majority of higher-end, enterprise, and government UAS platforms are aware of these threats and take actions to mitigate them. However, as the consumer market continues to grow and prices continue to drop, network security may be overlooked or ignored in favor of producing the lowest cost product possible. Additionally, these commercial off-the-shelf UAS often use uniform, standardized frequency bands, autopilots, and security measures, meaning a cyberattack could be developed to affect a wide variety of models with minimal changes. This paper will focus on a low-cost educational-use UAS and test its resilience to a variety of cyberattack methods, including man-in-the-middle attacks, spoofing of data, and distributed denial-of-service attacks. Following this experiment will be a discussion of current cybersecurity practices for counteracting these attacks and how they can be applied onboard a UAS. Although in this case the cyberattacks were tested against a simpler platform, the methods discussed are applicable to any UAS platform attempting to defend against such cyberattack methods.
Authored by Jamison Colter, Matthew Kinnison, Alex Henderson, Stephen Schlager, Samuel Bryan, Katherine O’Grady, Ashlie Abballe, Steven Harbour
The big data platform based on cloud computing realizes the storage, analysis and processing of massive data, and provides users with more efficient, accurate and intelligent Internet services. Combined with the characteristics of college teaching resource sharing platform based on cloud computing mode, the multi-faceted security defense strategy of the platform is studied from security management, security inspection and technical means. In the detection module, the optimization of the support vector machine is realized, the detection period is determined, the DDoS data traffic characteristics are extracted, and the source ID blacklist is established; the triggering of the defense mechanism in the defense module, the construction of the forwarder forwarding queue and the forwarder forwarding capability are realized. Reallocation.
Authored by Zhiyi Xing
Bitcoin P2P networking is especially vulnerable to networking threats because it is permissionless and does not have the security protections based on the trust in identities, which enables the attackers to manipulate the identities for Sybil and spoofing attacks. The Bitcoin node keeps track of its peer’s networking misbehaviors through ban scores. In this paper, we investigate the security problems of the ban-score mechanism and discover that the ban score is not only ineffective against the Bitcoin Message-based DoS (BM-DoS) attacks but also vulnerable to the Defamation attack as the network adversary can exploit the ban score to defame innocent peers. To defend against these threats, we design an anomaly detection approach that is effective, lightweight, and tailored to the networking threats exploiting Bitcoin’s ban-score mechanism. We prototype our threat discoveries against a real-world Bitcoin node connected to the Bitcoin Mainnet and conduct experiments based on the prototype implementation. The experimental results show that the attacks have devastating impacts on the targeted victim while being cost-effective on the attacker side. For example, an attacker can ban a peer in two milliseconds and reduce the victim’s mining rate by hundreds of thousands of hash computations per second. Furthermore, to counter the threats, we empirically validate our detection countermeasure’s effectiveness and performances against the BM-DoS and Defamation attacks.
Authored by Wenjun Fan, Simeon Wuthier, Hsiang-Jen Hong, Xiaobo Zhou, Yan Bai, Sang-Yoon Chang
The internet has developed and transformed the world dramatically in recent years, which has resulted in several cyberattacks. Cybersecurity is one of society’s most serious challenge, costing millions of dollars every year. The research presented here will look into this area, focusing on malware that can establish botnets, and in particular, detecting connections made by infected workstations connecting with the attacker’s machine. In recent years, the frequency of network security incidents has risen dramatically. Botnets have previously been widely used by attackers to carry out a variety of malicious activities, such as compromising machines to monitor their activities by installing a keylogger or sniffing traffic, launching Distributed Denial of Service (DDOS) attacks, stealing the identity of the machine or credentials, and even exfiltrating data from the user’s computer. Botnet detection is still a work in progress because no one approach exists that can detect a botnet’s whole ecosystem. A detailed analysis of a botnet, discuss numerous parameter’s result of detection methods related to botnet attacks, as well as existing work of botnet identification in field of machine learning are discuss here. This paper focuses on the comparative analysis of various classifier based on design of botnet detection technique which are able to detect P2P botnet using machine learning classifier.
Authored by Priyanka Tikekar, Swati Sherekar, Vilas Thakre
HTTP flood DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attacks send illegitimate HTTP requests to the targeted site or server. These kinds of attacks corrupt the networks with the help of massive attacking nodes thus blocking incoming traffic. Computer network connected devices are the major source to distributed denial of service attacks (or) botnet attacks. The computer manufacturers rapidly increase the network devices as per the requirement increases in the different environmental needs. Generally the manufacturers cannot ship computer network products with high level security. Those network products require additional security to prevent the DDoS attacks. The present technology is filled with 4G that will impact DDoS attacks. The million DDoS attacks had experienced in every year by companies or individuals. DDoS attack in a network would lead to loss of assets, data and other resources. Purchasing the new equipment and repair of the DDoS attacked network is financially becomes high in the value. The prevention mechanisms like CAPTCHA are now outdated to the bots and which are solved easily by the advanced bots. In the proposed work a secured botnet prevention mechanism provides network security by prevent and mitigate the http flooding based DDoS attack and allow genuine incoming traffic to the application or server in a network environment with the help of integrating invisible challenge and Resource Request Rate algorithms to the application. It offers double security layer to handle malicious bots to prevent and mitigate.
Authored by Durga Varre, Jayanag Bayana
In the era of Internet usage growth, storage services are widely used where users' can store their data, while hackers techniques pose massive threats to users' data security. The proposed system introduces multiple layers of security where data confidentiality, integrity and availability are achieved using honey encryption, hashed random passwords as well as detecting intruders and preventing them. The used techniques can ensure security against brute force and denial of service attacks. Our proposed methodology proofs the efficiency for storing and retrieving data using honey words and password hashing with less execution time and more security features achieved compared with other systems. Other systems depend on user password leading to easily predict it, we avoid this approach by making the password given to the user is randomly generated which make it unpredictable and hard to break. Moreover, we created a simple user interface to interact with users to take their inputs and store them along with the given password in true database, if an adversary detected, he will be processed as a normal user but with fake information taken from another database called false database, after that, the admin will be notified about this illegitimate access by providing the IP address. This approach will make the admin have continuous detection and ensure availability and confidentiality. Our execution time is efficient as the encryption process takes 244 ms and decryption 229 ms.
Authored by Manal AlShalaan, Reem AlSubaie, Anees Ara
The consensus-based frequency control relying on a communication system is used to restore the frequency deviations introduced by the primary droop control in an islanded AC microgrid, a typical cyber-physical power system(CPPS). This paper firstly studies the performance of the CPPS under two types of Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS ) attacks, finds that the intelligent attacks may cause more damage than the brute force attacks, and analyzes some potential defense strategies of the CPPS from two points of view. Some simulation results are also given to show the performance of both the physical and cyber system of the CPPS under different operation conditions.
Authored by Bingyu Wang, Qiuye Sun, Fang Fang
The latest, modern security camera systems record numerous data at once. With the utilization of artificial intelligence, these systems can even compose an online attendance register of students present during the lectures. Data is primarily recorded on the hard disk of the NVR (Network Video Recorder), and in the long term, it is recommended to save the data in the blockchain. The purpose of the research is to demonstrate how university security cameras can be securely connected to the blockchain. This would be important for universities as this is sensitive student data that needs to be protected from unauthorized access. In my research, as part of the practical implementation, I therefore also use encryption methods and data fragmentation, which are saved at the nodes of the blockchain. Thus, even a DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) type attack may be easily repelled, as data is not concentrated on a single, central server. To further increase security, it is useful to constitute a blockchain capable of its own data storage at the faculty itself, rather than renting data storage space, so we, ourselves may regulate the conditions of operation, and the policy of data protection. As a practical part of my research, therefore, I created a blockchain called UEDSC (Universities Data Storage Chain) where I saved the student's data.
Authored by Krisztián Bálint
In this work, the security sliding mode control issue is studied for interval type-2 (IT2) fuzzy systems under the unreliable network. The deception attacks and the denial-of-service (DoS) attacks may occur in the sensor-controller channels to affect the transmission of the system state, and these attacks are described via two independent Bernoulli stochastic variables. By adopting the compensation strategy and utilizing the available state, the new membership functions are constructed to design the fuzzy controller with the different fuzzy rules from the fuzzy model. Then, under the mismatched membership function, the designed security controller can render the closed-loop IT2 fuzzy system to be stochastically stable and the sliding surface to be reachable. Finally, the simulation results verify the security control scheme.
Authored by Yekai Yang, Bei Chen, Kun Xu, Yugang Niu
Network attacks are becoming more intense and characterized by complexity and persistence. Mechanisms that ensure network resilience to faults and threats should be well provided. Different approaches have been proposed to network resilience; however, most of them rely on static policies, which is unsuitable for current complex network environments and real-time requirements. To address these issues, we present a Belief-Desire-Intention (BDI) based multi-agent resilience network controller coupled with blockchain. We first clarify the theory and platform of the BDI, then discuss how the BDI evaluates the network resilience. In addition, we present the architecture, workflow, and applications of the resilience network controller. Simulation results show that the resilience network controller can effectively detect and mitigate distributed denial of service attacks.
Authored by Yanbo Song, Xianming Gao, Pengcheng Li, Chungang Yang
Security of Internet of Things (IoT) is one of the most prevalent crucial challenges ever since. The diversified devices and their specification along with resource constrained protocols made it more complex to address over all security need of IoT. Denial of Service attacks, being the most powerful and frequent attacks on IoT have been considered so forth. However, the attack happens on multiple layers and thus a single detection technique for each layer is not sufficient and effective to combat these attacks. Current study focuses on cross layer intrusion detection system (IDS) for detection of multiple Denial of Service (DoS) attacks. Presently, two attacks at Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Routing Protocol are considered for Low power and Lossy Networks (RPL) and a neural network-based IDS approach has been proposed for the detection of such attacks. The attacks are simulated on NetSim and detection and the performance shows up to 80% detection probabilities.
Authored by Ayushi Kharkwal, Saumya Mishra, Aditi Paul
In the Smart Grid paradigm, this critical infrastructure operation is increasingly exposed to cyber-threats due to the increased dependency on communication networks. An adversary can launch an attack on a power grid operation through False Data Injection into system measurements and/or through attacks on the communication network, such as flooding the communication channels with unnecessary data or intercepting messages. A cross-layered strategy that combines power grid data, communication grid monitoring and Machine Learning-based processing is a promising solution for detecting cyber-threats. In this paper, an implementation of an integrated solution of a cross-layer framework is presented. The advantage of such a framework is the augmentation of valuable data that enhances the detection of anomalies in the operation of power grid. IEEE 118-bus system is built in Simulink to provide a power grid testing environment and communication network data is emulated using SimComponents. The performance of the framework is investigated under various FDI and communication attacks.
Authored by Nader Aljohani, Dennis Agnew, Keerthiraj Nagaraj, Sharon Boamah, Reynold Mathieu, Arturo Bretas, Janise McNair, Alina Zare
Cloud provides access to shared pool of resources like storage, networking, and processing. Distributed denial of service attacks are dangerous for Cloud services because they mainly target the availability of resources. It is important to detect and prevent a DDoS attack for the continuity of Cloud services. In this review, we analyze the different mechanisms of detection and prevention of the DDoS attacks in Clouds. We identify the major DDoS attacks in Clouds and compare the frequently-used strategies to detect, prevent, and mitigate those attacks that will help the future researchers in this area.
Authored by Muhammad Tehaam, Salman Ahmad, Hassan Shahid, Muhammad Saboor, Ayesha Aziz, Kashif Munir
One of the major threats in the cyber security and networking world is a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack. With massive development in Science and Technology, the privacy and security of various organizations are concerned. Computer Intrusion and DDoS attacks have always been a significant issue in networked environments. DDoS attacks result in non-availability of services to the end-users. It interrupts regular traffic flow and causes a flood of flooded packets, causing the system to crash. This research presents a Machine Learning-based DDoS attack detection system to overcome this challenge. For the training and testing purpose, we have used the NSL-KDD Dataset. Logistic Regression Classifier, Support Vector Machine, K Nearest Neighbour, and Decision Tree Classifier are examples of machine learning algorithms which we have used to train our model. The accuracy gained are 90.4, 90.36, 89.15 and 82.28 respectively. We have added a feature called BOTNET Prevention, which scans for Phishing URLs and prevents a healthy device from being a part of the botnet.
Authored by Neeta Chavan, Mohit Kukreja, Gaurav Jagwani, Neha Nishad, Namrata Deb
A classification issue in machine learning is the issue of spotting Distributed Denial of Service (DDos) attacks. A Denial of Service (DoS) assault is essentially a deliberate attack launched from a single source with the implied intent of rendering the target's application unavailable. Attackers typically aims to consume all available network bandwidth in order to accomplish this, which inhibits authorized users from accessing system resources and denies them access. DDoS assaults, in contrast to DoS attacks, include several sources being used by the attacker to launch an attack. At the network, transportation, presentation, and application layers of a 7-layer OSI architecture, DDoS attacks are most frequently observed. With the help of the most well-known standard dataset and multiple regression analysis, we have created a machine learning model in this work that can predict DDoS and bot assaults based on traffic.
Authored by Soumyajit Das, Zeeshaan Dayam, Pinaki Chatterjee
Cloud computing provides a great platform for the users to utilize the various computational services in order accomplish their requests. However it is difficult to utilize the computational storage services for the file handling due to the increased protection issues. Here Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks are the most commonly found attack which will prevent from cloud service utilization. Thus it is confirmed that the DDoS attack detection and load balancing in cloud are most extreme issues which needs to be concerned more for the improved performance. This attained in this research work by measuring up the trust factors of virtual machines in order to predict the most trustable VMs which will be combined together to form the trustable source vector. After trust evaluation, in this work Bat algorithm is utilized for the optimal load distribution which will predict the optimal VM resource for the task allocation with the concern of budget. This method is most useful in the process of detecting the DDoS attacks happening on the VM resources. Finally prevention of DDOS attacks are performed by introducing the Fuzzy Extreme Learning Machine Classifier which will learn the cloud resource setup details based on which DDoS attack detection can be prevented. The overall performance of the suggested study design is performed in a Java simulation model to demonstrate the superiority of the proposed algorithm over the current research method.
Authored by Sai Manoj
Internet of Things (IoT) and those protocol CoAP and MQTT has security issues that have entirely changed the security strategy should be utilized and behaved for devices restriction. Several challenges have been observed in multiple domains of security, but Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) have actually dangerous in IoT that have RT. Thus, the IoT paradigm and those protocols CoAP and MQTT have been investigated to seek whether network services could be efficiently delivered for resources usage, managed, and disseminated to the devices. Internet of Things is justifiably joined with the best practices augmentation to make this task enriched. However, factors behaviors related to traditional networks have not been effectively mitigated until now. In this paper, we present and deep, qualitative, and comprehensive systematic mapping to find the answers to the following research questions, such as, (i) What is the state-of-the-art in IoT security, (ii) How to solve the restriction devices challenges via infrastructure involvement, (iii) What type of technical/protocol/ paradigm needs to be studied, and (iv) Security profile should be taken care of, (v) As the proposals are being evaluated: A. If in simulated/virtualized/emulated environment or; B. On real devices, in which case which devices. After doing a comparative study with other papers dictate that our work presents a timely contribution in terms of novel knowledge toward an understanding of formulating IoT security challenges under the IoT restriction devices take care.
Authored by Márcio Nascimento, Jean Araujo, Admilson Ribeiro
Computer and Vehicular networks, both are prone to multiple information security breaches because of many reasons like lack of standard protocols for secure communication and authentication. Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) is a threat that disrupts the communication in networks. Detection and prevention of DDoS attacks with accuracy is a necessity to make networks safe.In this paper, we have experimented two machine learning-based techniques one each for attack detection and attack prevention. These detection & prevention techniques are implemented in different environments including vehicular network environments and computer network environments. Three different datasets connected to heterogeneous environments are adopted for experimentation. The first dataset is the NSL-KDD dataset based on the traffic of the computer network. The second dataset is based on a simulation-based vehicular environment, and the third CIC-DDoS 2019 dataset is a computer network-based dataset. These datasets contain different number of attributes and instances of network traffic. For the purpose of attack detection AdaBoostM1 classification algorithm is used in WEKA and for attack prevention Logit Model is used in STATA. Results show that an accuracy of more than 99.9% is obtained from the simulation-based vehicular dataset. This is the highest accuracy rate among the three datasets and it is obtained within a very short period of time i.e., 0.5 seconds. In the same way, we use a Logit regression-based model to classify packets. This model shows an accuracy of 100%.
Authored by Amandeep Verma, Rahul Saha
Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks aim to cause downtime or a lack of responsiveness for web services. DDoS attacks targeting the application layer are amongst the hardest to catch as they generally appear legitimate at lower layers and attempt to take advantage of common application functionality or aspects of the HTTP protocol, rather than simply send large amounts of traffic like with volumetric flooding. Attacks can focus on functionality such as database operations, file retrieval, or just general backend code. In this paper, we examine common forms of application layer attacks, preventative and detection measures, and take a closer look specifically at HTTP Flooding attacks by the High Orbit Ion Cannon (HOIC) and “low and slow” attacks through slowloris.
Authored by Samuel Black, Yoohwan Kim
The new paradigm software-defined networking (SDN) supports network innovation and makes the control of network operations more agile. The flow table is the main component of SDN switch which contains a set of flow entries that define how new flows are processed. Low-rate distributed denial-of-service (LR-DDoS) attacks are difficult to detect and mitigate because they behave like legitimate users. There are many detection methods for LR DDoS attacks in the literature, but none of these methods detect single-packet LR DDoS attacks. In fact, LR DDoS attackers exploit vulnerabilities in the mechanism of congestion control in TCP to either periodically retransmit burst attack packets for a short time period or to continuously launch a single attack packet at a constant low rate. In this paper, the proposed scheme detects LR-DDoS by examining all incoming packets and filtering the single packets sent from different source IP addresses to the same destination at a constant low rate. Sending single packets at a constant low rate will increase the number of flows at the switch which can make it easily overflowed. After detecting the single attack packets, the proposed scheme prevents LR-DDoS at its early stage by deleting the flows created by these packets once they reach the threshold. According to the results of the experiment, the scheme achieves 99.47% accuracy in this scenario. In addition, the scheme has simple logic and simple calculation, which reduces the overhead of the SDN controller.
Authored by Wisam Muragaa
Wireless sensor networks are used in many areas such as war field surveillance, monitoring of patient, controlling traffic, environmental and building surveillance. Wireless technology, on the other hand, brings a load of new threats with it. Because WSNs communicate across radio frequencies, they are more susceptible to interference than wired networks. The authors of this research look at the goals of WSNs in terms of security as well as DDOS attacks. The majority of techniques are available for detecting DDOS attacks in WSNs. These alternatives, on the other hand, stop the assault after it has begun, resulting in data loss and wasting limited sensor node resources. The study finishes with a new method for detecting the UDP Reflection Amplification Attack in WSN, as well as instructions on how to use it and how to deal with the case.
Authored by B.J Kumar, V.S Gowda