Manipulating Adversary’s Belief: A Dynamic Game Approach to Deception by Design for Proactive Network Security

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Abstract

Due to the sophisticated nature of current computer systems, traditional defense measures, such as firewalls, malware scanners, and intrusion detection/prevention systems, have been found inadequate. These technological systems suffer from the fact that a sophisticated attacker can study them, identify their weaknesses and thus get an advantage over the defender. To prevent this from happening a proactive cyber defense is a new defense mechanism in which we strategically engage the attacker by using cyber deception techniques, and we influence his actions by creating and reinforcing his view of the computer system. We apply the cyber deception techniques in the field of network security and study the impact of the deception on attacker’s beliefs using the quantitative framework of the game theory. We account for the sequential nature of an attack and investigate how attacker’s belief evolves and influences his actions. We show how the defender should manipulate this belief to prevent the attacker from achieving his goals and thus minimize the damage inflicted to the network. To design a successful defense based on cyber deception, it is crucial to employ strategic thinking and account explicitly for attacker’s belief that he is being exposed to deceptive attempts. By doing so, we can make the deception more believable from the perspective of the attacker.

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APA

Horák, K., Zhu, Q., & Bošanský, B. (2017). Manipulating Adversary’s Belief: A Dynamic Game Approach to Deception by Design for Proactive Network Security. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 10575 LNCS, pp. 273–294). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-68711-7_15

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