Improving Botnet Detection with Recurrent Neural Network and Transfer Learning

26 Apr 2021  ·  Jeeyung Kim, Alex Sim, Jinoh Kim, Kesheng Wu, Jaegyoon Hahm ·

Botnet detection is a critical step in stopping the spread of botnets and preventing malicious activities. However, reliable detection is still a challenging task, due to a wide variety of botnets involving ever-increasing types of devices and attack vectors. Recent approaches employing machine learning (ML) showed improved performance than earlier ones, but these ML- based approaches still have significant limitations. For example, most ML approaches can not incorporate sequential pattern analysis techniques key to detect some classes of botnets. Another common shortcoming of ML-based approaches is the need to retrain neural networks in order to detect the evolving botnets; however, the training process is time-consuming and requires significant efforts to label the training data. For fast-evolving botnets, it might take too long to create sufficient training samples before the botnets have changed again. To address these challenges, we propose a novel botnet detection method, built upon Recurrent Variational Autoencoder (RVAE) that effectively captures sequential characteristics of botnet activities. In the experiment, this semi-supervised learning method achieves better detection accuracy than similar learning methods, especially on hard to detect classes. Additionally, we devise a transfer learning framework to learn from a well-curated source data set and transfer the knowledge to a target problem domain not seen before. Tests show that the true-positive rate (TPR) with transfer learning is higher than the RVAE semi-supervised learning method trained using the target data set (91.8% vs. 68.3%).

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Datasets


  Add Datasets introduced or used in this paper

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods