Visible to the public Prudent Practices for Designing Malware Experiments: Status Quo and Outlook

TitlePrudent Practices for Designing Malware Experiments: Status Quo and Outlook
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsRossow, C., Dietrich, C.J., Grier, C., Kreibich, C., Paxson, V., Pohlmann, N., Bos, H., van Steen, M.
Conference NameSecurity and Privacy (SP), 2012 IEEE Symposium on
Date PublishedMay
KeywordsCommunities, datasets, detection model, dynamic analysis, experiments, Guidelines, Internet, invasive software, malicious code, Malware, malware dataset, malware experiment design, prudent practice, prudent science, Safety, security precaution, Training
Abstract

Malware researchers rely on the observation of malicious code in execution to collect datasets for a wide array of experiments, including generation of detection models, study of longitudinal behavior, and validation of prior research. For such research to reflect prudent science, the work needs to address a number of concerns relating to the correct and representative use of the datasets, presentation of methodology in a fashion sufficiently transparent to enable reproducibility, and due consideration of the need not to harm others. In this paper we study the methodological rigor and prudence in 36 academic publications from 2006-2011 that rely on malware execution. 40% of these papers appeared in the 6 highest-ranked academic security conferences. We find frequent shortcomings, including problematic assumptions regarding the use of execution-driven datasets (25% of the papers), absence of description of security precautions taken during experiments (71% of the articles), and oftentimes insufficient description of the experimental setup. Deficiencies occur in top-tier venues and elsewhere alike, highlighting a need for the community to improve its handling of malware datasets. In the hope of aiding authors, reviewers, and readers, we frame guidelines regarding transparency, realism, correctness, and safety for collecting and using malware datasets.

URLhttp://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6234405/?reload=true
DOI10.1109/SP.2012.14
Citation Key6234405