CRAIJan 8, 2025

Exploring Large Language Models for Semantic Analysis and Categorization of Android Malware

arXiv:2501.04848v114 citationsh-index: 112024 Annual Computer Security Applications Conference Workshops (ACSAC Workshops)
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of accelerating malware analysis for security analysts, though it is incremental as it applies an existing LLM with prompt engineering to a new domain.

The paper tackles the problem of tedious and time-consuming malware analysis by exploring the use of Large Language Models (LLMs) for semantic analysis and categorization of Android malware, achieving up to 77% classification accuracy and providing robust hierarchical summaries to pinpoint malicious code snippets.

Malware analysis is a complex process of examining and evaluating malicious software's functionality, origin, and potential impact. This arduous process typically involves dissecting the software to understand its components, infection vector, propagation mechanism, and payload. Over the years, deep reverse engineering of malware has become increasingly tedious, mainly due to modern malicious codebases' fast evolution and sophistication. Essentially, analysts are tasked with identifying the elusive needle in the haystack within the complexities of zero-day malware, all while under tight time constraints. Thus, in this paper, we explore leveraging Large Language Models (LLMs) for semantic malware analysis to expedite the analysis of known and novel samples. Built on GPT-4o-mini model, \msp is designed to augment malware analysis for Android through a hierarchical-tiered summarization chain and strategic prompt engineering. Additionally, \msp performs malware categorization, distinguishing potential malware from benign applications, thereby saving time during the malware reverse engineering process. Despite not being fine-tuned for Android malware analysis, we demonstrate that through optimized and advanced prompt engineering \msp can achieve up to 77% classification accuracy while providing highly robust summaries at functional, class, and package levels. In addition, leveraging the backward tracing of the summaries from package to function levels allowed us to pinpoint the precise code snippets responsible for malicious behavior.

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