Biblio

Found 3153 results

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2018-04-04
Parchami, M., Bashbaghi, S., Granger, E..  2017.  CNNs with cross-correlation matching for face recognition in video surveillance using a single training sample per person. 2017 14th IEEE International Conference on Advanced Video and Signal Based Surveillance (AVSS). :1–6.

In video surveillance, face recognition (FR) systems seek to detect individuals of interest appearing over a distributed network of cameras. Still-to-video FR systems match faces captured in videos under challenging conditions against facial models, often designed using one reference still per individual. Although CNNs can achieve among the highest levels of accuracy in many real-world FR applications, state-of-the-art CNNs that are suitable for still-to-video FR, like trunk-branch ensemble (TBE) CNNs, represent complex solutions for real-time applications. In this paper, an efficient CNN architecture is proposed for accurate still-to-video FR from a single reference still. The CCM-CNN is based on new cross-correlation matching (CCM) and triplet-loss optimization methods that provide discriminant face representations. The matching pipeline exploits a matrix Hadamard product followed by a fully connected layer inspired by adaptive weighted cross-correlation. A triplet-based training approach is proposed to optimize the CCM-CNN parameters such that the inter-class variations are increased, while enhancing robustness to intra-class variations. To further improve robustness, the network is fine-tuned using synthetically-generated faces based on still and videos of non-target individuals. Experiments on videos from the COX Face and Chokepoint datasets indicate that the CCM-CNN can achieve a high level of accuracy that is comparable to TBE-CNN and HaarNet, but with a significantly lower time and memory complexity. It may therefore represent the better trade-off between accuracy and complexity for real-time video surveillance applications.

2018-01-23
Amir, Sarah, Shakya, Bicky, Forte, Domenic, Tehranipoor, Mark, Bhunia, Swarup.  2017.  Comparative Analysis of Hardware Obfuscation for IP Protection. Proceedings of the on Great Lakes Symposium on VLSI 2017. :363–368.

In the era of globalized Integrated Circuit (IC) design and manufacturing flow, a rising issue to the silicon industry is various attacks on hardware intellectual property (IP). As a measure to ensure security along the supply chain against IP piracy, tampering and reverse engineering, hardware obfuscation is considered a reliable defense mechanism. Sequential and combinational obfuscations are the primary classes of obfuscation, and multiple methods have been proposed in each type in recent years. This paper presents an overview of obfuscation techniques and a qualitative comparison of the two major types.

2018-04-04
Nguyen-Meidine, L. T., Granger, E., Kiran, M., Blais-Morin, L. A..  2017.  A comparison of CNN-based face and head detectors for real-time video surveillance applications. 2017 Seventh International Conference on Image Processing Theory, Tools and Applications (IPTA). :1–7.

Detecting faces and heads appearing in video feeds are challenging tasks in real-world video surveillance applications due to variations in appearance, occlusions and complex backgrounds. Recently, several CNN architectures have been proposed to increase the accuracy of detectors, although their computational complexity can be an issue, especially for realtime applications, where faces and heads must be detected live using high-resolution cameras. This paper compares the accuracy and complexity of state-of-the-art CNN architectures that are suitable for face and head detection. Single pass and region-based architectures are reviewed and compared empirically to baseline techniques according to accuracy and to time and memory complexity on images from several challenging datasets. The viability of these architectures is analyzed with real-time video surveillance applications in mind. Results suggest that, although CNN architectures can achieve a very high level of accuracy compared to traditional detectors, their computational cost can represent a limitation for many practical real-time applications.

2018-06-11
Belouch, Mustapha, hadaj, Salah El.  2017.  Comparison of Ensemble Learning Methods Applied to Network Intrusion Detection. Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Internet of Things, Data and Cloud Computing. :194:1–194:4.

This paper investigates the possibility of using ensemble learning methods to improve the performance of intrusion detection systems. We compare an ensemble of three ensemble learning methods, boosting, bagging and stacking in order to improve the detection rate and to reduce the false alarm rate. These ensemble methods use well-known and different base classification algorithms, J48 (decision tree), NB (Naïve Bayes), MLP (Neural Network) and REPTree. The comparison experiments are applied on UNSW-NB15 data set a recent public data set for network intrusion detection systems. Results show that using boosting, bagging can achieve higher accuracy than single classifier but stacking performs better than other ensemble learning methods.

2018-02-15
Han, Jordan W., Hoe, Ong J., Wing, Joseph S., Brohi, Sarfraz N..  2017.  A Conceptual Security Approach with Awareness Strategy and Implementation Policy to Eliminate Ransomware. Proceedings of the 2017 International Conference on Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence. :222–226.

Undeterred by numerous efforts deployed by antivirus software that shields users from various security threats, ransomware is constantly evolving as technology advances. The impact includes hackers hindering the user's accessibility to their data, and the user will pay ransom to retrieve their data. Ransomware also targets multimillion-dollar organizations, and it can cause colossal data loss. The organizations could face catastrophic consequences, and business operations could be ceased. This research contributes by spreading awareness of ransomware to alert people to tackle ransomware. The solution of this research is the conceptual development of a browser extension that provides assistance to warn users of plausible dangers while surfing the Internet. It allows the users to surf the web safely. Since the contribution of this research is conceptual, we can assume that technology users will adopt the proposed idea to prevent ransomware attacks on their personal computers once the solution is fully implemented in future research.

2018-04-02
Doolan, S., Hoseiny, N., Hosein, N., Bhagwandin, D..  2017.  Constant Time, Fixed Memory, Zero False Negative Error Logging for Low Power Wearable Devices. 2017 IEEE Conference on Wireless Sensors (ICWiSe). :1–5.

Wireless wearable embedded devices dominate the Internet of Things (IoT) due to their ability to provide useful information about the body and its local environment. The constrained resources of low power processors, however, pose a significant challenge to run-time error logging and hence, product reliability. Error logs classify error type and often system state following the occurrence of an error. Traditional error logging algorithms attempt to balance storage and accuracy by selectively overwriting past log entries. Since a specific combination of firmware faults may result in system instability, preserving all error occurrences becomes increasingly beneficial as IOT systems become more complex. In this paper, a novel hash-based error logging algorithm is presented which has both constant insertion time and constant memory while also exhibiting no false negatives and an acceptable false positive error rate. Both theoretical analysis and simulations are used to compare the performance of the hash-based and traditional approaches.

2018-03-26
Assaf, Eran, Basat, Ran Ben, Einziger, Gil, Friedman, Roy, Kassner, Yaron.  2017.  Counting Distinct Elements over Sliding Windows. Proceedings of the 10th ACM International Systems and Storage Conference. :22:1–22:1.

In Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks, an attacker tries to disable a service with a flood of seemingly legitimate requests from multiple devices; this is usually accompanied by a sharp spike in the number of distinct IP addresses / flows accessing the system in a short time frame. Hence, the number of distinct elements over sliding windows is a fundamental signal in DDoS identification. Additionally, assessing whether a specific flow has recently accessed the system, known as the Set Membership problem, can help us identify the attacking parties. Here, we show how to extend the functionality of a state of the art algorithm for set membership over a W elements sliding window. We now also support estimation of the distinct flow count, using as little as log2 (W) additional bits.

2018-05-11
2018-05-25
2018-03-19
Both, Fabian, Thoma, Steffen, Rettinger, Achim.  2017.  Cross-Modal Knowledge Transfer: Improving the Word Embedding of Apple by Looking at Oranges. Proceedings of the Knowledge Capture Conference. :18:1–18:8.

Capturing knowledge via learned latent vector representations of words, images and knowledge graph (KG) entities has shown state-of-the-art performance in computer vision, computational linguistics and KG tasks. Recent results demonstrate that the learning of such representations across modalities can be beneficial, since each modality captures complementary information. However, those approaches are limited to concepts with cross-modal alignments in the training data which are only available for just a few concepts. Especially for visual objects exist far fewer embeddings than for words or KG entities. We investigate whether a word embedding (e.g., for "apple") can still capture information from other modalities even if there is no matching concept within the other modalities (i.e., no images or KG entities of apples but of oranges as pictured in the title analogy). The empirical results of our knowledge transfer approach demonstrate that word embeddings do benefit from extrapolating information across modalities even for concepts that are not represented in the other modalities. Interestingly, this applies most to concrete concepts (e.g., dragonfly) while abstract concepts (e.g., animal) benefit most if aligned concepts are available in the other modalities.

2017-12-28
Poon, W. N., Bennin, K. E., Huang, J., Phannachitta, P., Keung, J. W..  2017.  Cross-Project Defect Prediction Using a Credibility Theory Based Naive Bayes Classifier. 2017 IEEE International Conference on Software Quality, Reliability and Security (QRS). :434–441.

Several defect prediction models proposed are effective when historical datasets are available. Defect prediction becomes difficult when no historical data exist. Cross-project defect prediction (CPDP), which uses projects from other sources/companies to predict the defects in the target projects proposed in recent studies has shown promising results. However, the performance of most CPDP approaches are still beyond satisfactory mainly due to distribution mismatch between the source and target projects. In this study, a credibility theory based Naïve Bayes (CNB) classifier is proposed to establish a novel reweighting mechanism between the source projects and target projects so that the source data could simultaneously adapt to the target data distribution and retain its own pattern. Our experimental results show that the feasibility of the novel algorithm design and demonstrate the significant improvement in terms of the performance metrics considered achieved by CNB over other CPDP approaches.

2018-02-21
Waye, Lucas, Buiras, Pablo, Arden, Owen, Russo, Alejandro, Chong, Stephen.  2017.  Cryptographically Secure Information Flow Control on Key-Value Stores. Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security. :1893–1907.

We present Clio, an information flow control (IFC) system that transparently incorporates cryptography to enforce confidentiality and integrity policies on untrusted storage. Clio insulates developers from explicitly manipulating keys and cryptographic primitives by leveraging the policy language of the IFC system to automatically use the appropriate keys and correct cryptographic operations. We prove that Clio is secure with a novel proof technique that is based on a proof style from cryptography together with standard programming languages results. We present a prototype Clio implementation and a case study that demonstrates Clio's practicality.

Bojanova, I., Black, P. E., Yesha, Y..  2017.  Cryptography classes in bugs framework (BF): Encryption bugs (ENC), verification bugs (VRF), and key management bugs (KMN). 2017 IEEE 28th Annual Software Technology Conference (STC). :1–8.

Accurate, precise, and unambiguous definitions of software weaknesses (bugs) and clear descriptions of software vulnerabilities are vital for building the foundations of cybersecurity. The Bugs Framework (BF) comprises rigorous definitions and (static) attributes of bug classes, along with their related dynamic properties, such as proximate, secondary and tertiary causes, consequences, and sites. This paper presents an overview of previously developed BF classes and the new cryptography related classes: Encryption Bugs (ENC), Verification Bugs (VRF), and Key Management Bugs (KMN). We analyze corresponding vulnerabilities and provide their clear descriptions by applying the BF taxonomy. We also discuss the lessons learned and share our plans for expanding BF.

2018-04-04
Yaseen, A. A., Bayart, M..  2017.  Cyber-attack detection in the networked control system with faulty plant. 2017 25th Mediterranean Conference on Control and Automation (MED). :980–985.

In this paper, the mathematical framework of behavioral system will be applied to detect the cyber-attack on the networked control system which is used to control the remotely operated underwater vehicle ROV. The Intelligent Generalized Predictive Controller IGPC is used to control the ROV. The IGPC is designed with fault-tolerant ability. In consequence of the used fault accommodation technique, the proposed cyber-attacks detector is able to clearly detect the presence of attacker control signal and to distinguish between the effects of the attacker signal and fault on the plant side. The test result of the suggested method demonstrates that it can be considerably used for detection of the cyber-attack.

2018-01-16
Benjamin, B., Coffman, J., Esiely-Barrera, H., Farr, K., Fichter, D., Genin, D., Glendenning, L., Hamilton, P., Harshavardhana, S., Hom, R. et al..  2017.  Data Protection in OpenStack. 2017 IEEE 10th International Conference on Cloud Computing (CLOUD). :560–567.

As cloud computing becomes increasingly pervasive, it is critical for cloud providers to support basic security controls. Although major cloud providers tout such features, relatively little is known in many cases about their design and implementation. In this paper, we describe several security features in OpenStack, a widely-used, open source cloud computing platform. Our contributions to OpenStack range from key management and storage encryption to guaranteeing the integrity of virtual machine (VM) images prior to boot. We describe the design and implementation of these features in detail and provide a security analysis that enumerates the threats that each mitigates. Our performance evaluation shows that these security features have an acceptable cost-in some cases, within the measurement error observed in an operational cloud deployment. Finally, we highlight lessons learned from our real-world development experiences from contributing these features to OpenStack as a way to encourage others to transition their research into practice.

2018-04-02
Boicea, A., Radulescu, F., Truica, C. O., Costea, C..  2017.  Database Encryption Using Asymmetric Keys: A Case Study. 2017 21st International Conference on Control Systems and Computer Science (CSCS). :317–323.

Data security has become an issue of increasing importance, especially for Web applications and distributed databases. One solution is using cryptographic algorithms whose improvement has become a constant concern. The increasing complexity of these algorithms involves higher execution times, leading to an application performance decrease. This paper presents a comparison of execution times for three algorithms using asymmetric keys, depending on the size of the encryption/decryption keys: RSA, ElGamal, and ECIES. For this algorithms comparison, a benchmark using Java APIs and an application for testing them on a test database was created.

2020-01-29
Cheh, Carmen, Chen, Binbin, Temple, William G., Sanders, William H..  2017.  Data-Driven Model-Based Detection of Malicious Insiders via Physical Access Logs. Quantitative Evaluation of Systems. :275–291.

The risk posed by insider threats has usually been approached by analyzing the behavior of users solely in the cyber domain. In this paper, we show the viability of using physical movement logs, collected via a building access control system, together with an understanding of the layout of the building housing the system's assets, to detect malicious insider behavior that manifests itself in the physical domain. In particular, we propose a systematic framework that uses contextual knowledge about the system and its users, learned from historical data gathered from a building access control system, to select suitable models for representing movement behavior. We then explore the online usage of the learned models, together with knowledge about the layout of the building being monitored, to detect malicious insider behavior. Finally, we show the effectiveness of the developed framework using real-life data traces of user movement in railway transit stations.

2018-01-16
Bhaya, W., EbadyManaa, M..  2017.  DDoS attack detection approach using an efficient cluster analysis in large data scale. 2017 Annual Conference on New Trends in Information Communications Technology Applications (NTICT). :168–173.

Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack is a congestion-based attack that makes both the network and host-based resources unavailable for legitimate users, sending flooding attack packets to the victim's resources. The non-existence of predefined rules to correctly identify the genuine network flow made the task of DDoS attack detection very difficult. In this paper, a combination of unsupervised data mining techniques as intrusion detection system are introduced. The entropy concept in term of windowing the incoming packets is applied with data mining technique using Clustering Using Representative (CURE) as cluster analysis to detect the DDoS attack in network flow. The data is mainly collected from DARPA2000, CAIDA2007 and CAIDA2008 datasets. The proposed approach has been evaluated and compared with several existing approaches in terms of accuracy, false alarm rate, detection rate, F. measure and Phi coefficient. Results indicates the superiority of the proposed approach with four out five detected phases, more than 99% accuracy rate 96.29% detection rate, around 0% false alarm rate 97.98% F-measure, and 97.98% Phi coefficient.

2018-11-28
Bortolameotti, Riccardo, van Ede, Thijs, Caselli, Marco, Everts, Maarten H., Hartel, Pieter, Hofstede, Rick, Jonker, Willem, Peter, Andreas.  2017.  DECANTeR: DEteCtion of Anomalous outbouNd HTTP TRaffic by Passive Application Fingerprinting. Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Computer Security Applications Conference. :373–386.

We present DECANTeR, a system to detect anomalous outbound HTTP communication, which passively extracts fingerprints for each application running on a monitored host. The goal of our system is to detect unknown malware and backdoor communication indicated by unknown fingerprints extracted from a host's network traffic. We evaluate a prototype with realistic data from an international organization and datasets composed of malicious traffic. We show that our system achieves a false positive rate of 0.9% for 441 monitored host machines, an average detection rate of 97.7%, and that it cannot be evaded by malware using simple evasion techniques such as using known browser user agent values. We compare our solution with DUMONT [24], the current state-of-the-art IDS which detects HTTP covert communication channels by focusing on benign HTTP traffic. The results show that DECANTeR outperforms DUMONT in terms of detection rate, false positive rate, and even evasion-resistance. Finally, DECANTeR detects 96.8% of information stealers in our dataset, which shows its potential to detect data exfiltration.

2018-10-26
Azad, Muhammad Ajmal, Bag, Samiran.  2017.  Decentralized Privacy-aware Collaborative Filtering of Smart Spammers in a Telecommunication Network. Proceedings of the Symposium on Applied Computing. :1711–1717.

Smart spammers and telemarketers circumvent the standalone spam detection systems by making low rate spam-ming activity to a large number of recipients distributed across many telecommunication operators. The collaboration among multiple telecommunication operators (OPs) will allow operators to get rid of unwanted callers at the early stage of their spamming activity. The challenge in the design of collaborative spam detection system is that OPs are not willing to share certain information about behaviour of their users/customers because of privacy concerns. Ideally, operators agree to share certain aggregated statistical information if collaboration process ensures complete privacy protection of users and their network data. To address this challenge and convince OPs for the collaboration, this paper proposes a decentralized reputation aggregation protocol that enables OPs to take part in a collaboration process without use of a trusted third party centralized system and without developing a predefined trust relationship with other OPs. To this extent, the collaboration among operators is achieved through the exchange of cryptographic reputation scores among OPs thus fully protects relationship network and reputation scores of users even in the presence of colluders. We evaluate the performance of proposed protocol over the simulated data consisting of five collaborators. Experimental results revealed that proposed approach outperforms standalone systems in terms of true positive rate and false positive rate.

2018-11-28
Jhumka, Arshad, Bradbury, Matthew.  2017.  Deconstructing Source Location Privacy-Aware Routing Protocols. Proceedings of the Symposium on Applied Computing. :431–436.

Source location privacy (SLP) is becoming an important property for a large class of security-critical wireless sensor network applications such as monitoring and tracking. Much of the previous work on SLP have focused on the development of various protocols to enhance the level of SLP imparted to the network, under various attacker models and other conditions. Others works have focused on analysing the level of SLP being imparted by a specific protocol. In this paper, we focus on deconstructing routing-based SLP protocols to enable a better understanding of their structure. We argue that the SLP-aware routing protocols can be classified into two main categories, namely (i) spatial and (ii) temporal. Based on this, we show that there are three important components, namely (i) decoy selection, (ii) use and routing of control messages and (iii) use and routing of decoy messages. The decoy selection technique imparts the spatial or temporal property of SLP-aware routing. We show the viability of the framework through the construction of well-known SLP-aware routing protocols using the identified components.

2018-11-19
Vu, Ly, Bui, Cong Thanh, Nguyen, Quang Uy.  2017.  A Deep Learning Based Method for Handling Imbalanced Problem in Network Traffic Classification. Proceedings of the Eighth International Symposium on Information and Communication Technology. :333–339.

Network traffic classification is an important problem in network traffic analysis. It plays a vital role in many network tasks including quality of service, firewall enforcement and security. One of the challenging problems of classifying network traffic is the imbalanced property of network data. Usually, the amount of traffic in some classes is much higher than the amount of traffic in other classes. In this paper, we proposed an application of a deep learning approach to address imbalanced data problem in network traffic classification. We used a recent proposed deep network for unsupervised learning called Auxiliary Classifier Generative Adversarial Network to generate synthesized data samples for balancing between the minor and the major classes. We tested our method on a well-known network traffic dataset and the results showed that our proposed method achieved better performance compared to a recent proposed method for handling imbalanced problem in network traffic classification.

2018-01-10
Bai, Jiale, Ni, Bingbing, Wang, Minsi, Shen, Yang, Lai, Hanjiang, Zhang, Chongyang, Mei, Lin, Hu, Chuanping, Yao, Chen.  2017.  Deep Progressive Hashing for Image Retrieval. Proceedings of the 2017 ACM on Multimedia Conference. :208–216.

This paper proposes a novel recursive hashing scheme, in contrast to conventional "one-off" based hashing algorithms. Inspired by human's "nonsalient-to-salient" perception path, the proposed hashing scheme generates a series of binary codes based on progressively expanded salient regions. Built on a recurrent deep network, i.e., LSTM structure, the binary codes generated from later output nodes naturally inherit information aggregated from previously codes while explore novel information from the extended salient region, and therefore it possesses good scalability property. The proposed deep hashing network is trained via minimizing a triplet ranking loss, which is end-to-end trainable. Extensive experimental results on several image retrieval benchmarks demonstrate good performance gain over state-of-the-art image retrieval methods and its scalability property.

2018-07-26
2018-02-21
Bellare, Mihir, Dai, Wei.  2017.  Defending Against Key Exfiltration: Efficiency Improvements for Big-Key Cryptography via Large-Alphabet Subkey Prediction. Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security. :923–940.

Towards advancing the use of big keys as a practical defense against key exfiltration, this paper provides efficiency improvements for cryptographic schemes in the bounded retrieval model (BRM). We identify probe complexity (the number of scheme accesses to the slow storage medium storing the big key) as the dominant cost. Our main technical contribution is what we call the large-alphabet subkey prediction lemma. It gives good bounds on the predictability under leakage of a random sequence of blocks of the big key, as a function of the block size. We use it to significantly reduce the probe complexity required to attain a given level of security. Together with other techniques, this yields security-preserving performance improvements for BRM symmetric encryption schemes and BRM public-key identification schemes.