Jinchun Choi

2papers

2 Papers

CRMar 26, 2021
Understanding Internet of Things Malware by Analyzing Endpoints in their Static Artifacts

Afsah Anwar, Jinchun Choi, Abdulrahman Alabduljabbar et al.

The lack of security measures among the Internet of Things (IoT) devices and their persistent online connection gives adversaries a prime opportunity to target them or even abuse them as intermediary targets in larger attacks such as distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) campaigns. In this paper, we analyze IoT malware and focus on the endpoints reachable on the public Internet, that play an essential part in the IoT malware ecosystem. Namely, we analyze endpoints acting as dropzones and their targets to gain insights into the underlying dynamics in this ecosystem, such as the affinity between the dropzones and their target IP addresses, and the different patterns among endpoints. Towards this goal, we reverse-engineer 2,423 IoT malware samples and extract strings from them to obtain IP addresses. We further gather information about these endpoints from public Internet-wide scanners, such as Shodan and Censys. For the masked IP addresses, we examine the Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) networks accumulating to more than 100 million (78.2% of total active public IPv4 addresses) endpoints. Our investigation from four different perspectives provides profound insights into the role of endpoints in IoT malware attacks, which deepens our understanding of IoT malware ecosystems and can assist future defenses.

CRFeb 11, 2019
Analyzing, Comparing, and Detecting Emerging Malware: A Graph-based Approach

Hisham Alasmary, Aminollah Khormali, Afsah Anwar et al.

The growth in the number of Android and Internet of Things (IoT) devices has witnessed a parallel increase in the number of malicious software (malware), calling for new analysis approaches. We represent binaries using their graph properties of the Control Flow Graph (CFG) structure and conduct an in-depth analysis of malicious graphs extracted from the Android and IoT malware to understand their differences. Using 2,874 and 2,891 malware binaries corresponding to IoT and Android samples, we analyze both general characteristics and graph algorithmic properties. Using the CFG as an abstract structure, we then emphasize various interesting findings, such as the prevalence of unreachable code in Android malware, noted by the multiple components in their CFGs, and larger number of nodes in the Android malware, compared to the IoT malware, highlighting a higher order of complexity. We implement a Machine Learning based classifiers to detect IoT malware from benign ones, and achieved an accuracy of 97.9% using Random Forests (RF).