Beyond Single Reports: Evaluating Automated ATT&CK Technique Extraction in Multi-Report Campaign Settings
It addresses the challenge for security researchers of efficiently extracting attack techniques and controls from large-scale cyberattacks documented across multiple reports, though it is incremental as it builds on existing methods by evaluating them in a multi-report context.
This study tackled the problem of automated ATT&CK technique extraction from multiple cyber threat intelligence (CTI) reports in campaign settings, showing that aggregating reports improves F1 scores by about 26% over single-report analysis, with maximum F1 scores reaching 78.6% for SolarWinds and 54.9% for XZ Utils.
Large-scale cyberattacks, referred to as campaigns, are documented across multiple CTI reports from diverse sources, with some providing a high-level overview of attack techniques and others providing technical details. Extracting attack techniques from reports is essential for organizations to identify the controls required to protect against attacks. Manually extracting techniques at scale is impractical. Existing automated methods focus on single reports, leaving many attack techniques and their controls undetected, resulting in a fragmented view of campaign behavior. The goal of this study is to aid security researchers in extracting attack techniques and controls from a campaign by replicating and comparing the performance of the state-of-the-art ATT&CK technique extraction methods in a multi-report campaign setting compared to prior single-report evaluations. We conduct an empirical study of 29 methods to extract attack techniques, spanning named entity recognition (NER), encoder-based classification, and decoder-based LLM approaches. Our study analyzes 90 CTI reports across three major attack campaigns: SolarWinds, XZ Utils, and Log4j, using both quantitative performance metrics and their impact on controls. Our results show that aggregating multiple CTI reports improves the F1 score by about 26% over single-report analysis, with most approaches reaching performance saturation after 5--15 reports. Despite these gains, extraction performance remains limited, with maximum F1 scores of 78.6% for SolarWinds and 54.9% for XZ Utils. Moreover, up to 33.3% of misclassifications involve semantically similar techniques that share tactics and overlap in descriptions. The misclassification has a disproportionate effect on control coverage. Reports that are longer and include technical details consistently perform better, even though their readability scores are low.