CRJan 29, 2021

Peeler: Profiling Kernel-Level Events to Detect Ransomware

arXiv:2101.12434v136 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the growing threat of ransomware for computer users by providing an efficient detection method, though it appears incremental as it builds on kernel-level monitoring techniques.

The paper tackles the problem of timely ransomware detection by presenting Peeler, a system that profiles kernel-level events to identify ransomware based on common behavioral characteristics, achieving over 99% detection rate with 0.58% false positives against 43 families and detecting crypto ransomware within 115 milliseconds on average after one file loss.

Ransomware is a growing threat that typically operates by either encrypting a victim's files or locking a victim's computer until the victim pays a ransom. However, it is still challenging to detect such malware timely with existing traditional malware detection techniques. In this paper, we present a novel ransomware detection system, called "Peeler" (Profiling kErnEl -Level Events to detect Ransomware). Peeler deviates from signatures for individual ransomware samples and relies on common and generic characteristics of ransomware depicted at the kernel-level. Analyzing diverse ransomware families, we observed ransomware's inherent behavioral characteristics such as stealth operations performed before the attack, file I/O request patterns, process spawning, and correlations among kernel-level events. Based on those characteristics, we develop Peeler that continuously monitors a target system's kernel events and detects ransomware attacks on the system. Our experimental results show that Peeler achieves more than 99\% detection rate with 0.58\% false-positive rate against 43 distinct ransomware families, containing samples from both crypto and screen-locker types of ransomware. For crypto ransomware, Peeler detects them promptly after only one file is lost (within 115 milliseconds on average). Peeler utilizes around 4.9\% of CPU time with only 9.8 MB memory under the normal workload condition. Our analysis demonstrates that Peeler can efficiently detect diverse malware families by monitoring their kernel-level events.

Foundations

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