Call behavioral analysis to thwart SPIT attacks on VoIP networks

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Abstract

The threat of voice spam, commonly known as Spam over Internet Telephony (SPIT) is a real and contemporary problem. If the problem remains unchecked then it may become as potent as email spam today. In this paper, we present two approaches to detect and prevent SPITting over the Internet. Both of our approaches are based on the anomaly detection of the distributions of selected call features (i.e., day and time of calling, call durations etc.). The first approach uses Mahalanobis Distance as a summarization tool and it is able to reliably detect individual spam VoIP calls at a microscopic level. The second approach is designed to detect groups of (potentially collaborating) VoIP spam calls at a macroscopic level. By computing entropy of call durations of groups of calls, we are able to build profile of normal calls and reliably detect the deviation from normal human call behavior that are caused by bulk spam calls. We empirically validate our VoIP spam call detection approaches with real VoIP call traces obtained from a VoIP service provider network. Our experimental results show that call feature distributions can be used to build a fairly general and effective anomalous call behavior detection framework. © 2012 ICST Institute for Computer Science, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering.

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APA

Sengar, H., Wang, X., & Nichols, A. (2012). Call behavioral analysis to thwart SPIT attacks on VoIP networks. In Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering (Vol. 96 LNICST, pp. 501–510). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-31909-9_31

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