CRGTFeb 21, 2020

Optimizing Vulnerability-Driven Honey Traffic Using Game Theory

arXiv:2002.09069v13 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of undetectable passive reconnaissance in enterprise networks, offering a novel defensive approach.

The paper tackles the problem of passive network reconnaissance by adversaries, proposing Snaz, a technique that uses deceptively crafted honey traffic to confound adversaries, and demonstrates optimal defender strategies that either dissuade attacks or reveal adversaries.

Enterprises are increasingly concerned about adversaries that slowly and deliberately exploit resources over the course of months or even years. A key step in this kill chain is network reconnaissance, which has historically been active (e.g., network scans) and therefore detectable. However, new networking technology increases the possibility of passive network reconnaissance, which will be largely undetectable by defenders. In this paper, we propose Snaz, a technique that uses deceptively crafted honey traffic to confound the knowledge gained through passive network reconnaissance. We present a two-player non-zero-sum Stackelberg game model that characterizes how a defender should deploy honey traffic in the presence of an adversary who is aware of Snaz. In doing so, we demonstrate the existence of optimal defender strategies that will either dissuade an adversary from acting on the existence of real vulnerabilities observed within network traffic, or reveal the adversary's presence when it attempts to unknowingly attack an intrusion detection node.

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