Carnegie Mellon University
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Finding and containing enemies within the walls with self-securing network interfaces

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journal contribution
posted on 1995-06-01, 00:00 authored by Gregory R. Ganger, Gregg Economou, Stanley M. Bielski
Abstract: "Self-securing network interfaces (NIs) examine the packets that they move between network links and host software, looking for and potentially blocking malicious network activity. This paper describes how self-securing network interfaces can help administrators to identify and contain compromised machines within their intranet. By shadowing host state, self-securing NIs can better identify suspicious traffic originating from that host, including many explicitly designed to defeat network intrusion detection systems. With normalization and detection-triggered throttling, self-securing NIs can reduce the ability of compromised hosts to launch attacks on other systems inside (or outside) the intranet. We describe a prototype self-securing NI and example scanners for detecting such things as TTL abuse, fragmentation abuse, 'SYN bomb' attacks, and random-propagation worms like Code-Red."

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1995-06-01

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