Biblio
Filters: Author is Ndichu, Samuel [Clear All Filters]
Security-Alert Screening with Oversampling Based on Conditional Generative Adversarial Networks. 2022 17th Asia Joint Conference on Information Security (AsiaJCIS). :1–7.
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2022. Imbalanced class distribution can cause information loss and missed/false alarms for deep learning and machine-learning algorithms. The detection performance of traditional intrusion detection systems tend to degenerate due to skewed class distribution caused by the uneven allocation of observations in different kinds of attacks. To combat class imbalance and improve network intrusion detection performance, we adopt the conditional generative adversarial network (CTGAN) that enables the generation of samples of specific classes of interest. CTGAN builds on the generative adversarial networks (GAN) architecture to model tabular data and generate high quality synthetic data by conditionally sampling rows from the generated model. Oversampling using CTGAN adds instances to the minority class such that both data in the majority and the minority class are of equal distribution. The generated security alerts are used for training classifiers that realize critical alert detection. The proposed scheme is evaluated on a real-world dataset collected from security operation center of a large enterprise. The experiment results show that detection accuracy can be substantially improved when CTGAN is adopted to produce a balanced security-alert dataset. We believe the proposed CTGAN-based approach can cast new light on building effective systems for critical alert detection with reduced missed/false alarms.
ISSN: 2765-9712
A Machine Learning Approach to Detection of Critical Alerts from Imbalanced Multi-Appliance Threat Alert Logs. 2021 IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data). :2119–2127.
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2021. The extraordinary number of alerts generated by network intrusion detection systems (NIDS) can desensitize security analysts tasked with incident response. Security information and event management systems (SIEMs) perform some rudimentary automation but cannot replicate the decision-making process of a skilled analyst. Machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) can detect patterns in data with appropriate training. In practice, the majority of the alert data comprises false alerts, and true alerts form only a small proportion. Consequently, a naive engine that classifies all security alerts into the majority class can yield a superficial high accuracy close to 100%. Without any correction for the class imbalance, the false alerts will dominate algorithmic predictions resulting in poor generalization performance. We propose a machine-learning approach to address the class imbalance problem in multi-appliance security alert data and automate the security alert analysis process performed in security operations centers (SOCs). We first used the neighborhood cleaning rule (NCR) to identify and remove ambiguous, noisy, and redundant false alerts. Then, we applied the support vector machine synthetic minority oversampling technique (SVMSMOTE) to generate synthetic training true alerts. Finally, we fit and evaluated the decision tree and random forest classifiers. In the experiments, using alert data from eight security appliances, we demonstrated that the proposed method can significantly reduce the need for manual auditing, decreasing the number of uninspected alerts and achieving a performance of 99.524% in recall.