UCSD Researchers Analyze Prevalence and Patterns of Worldwide Denial-of-Service Attacks on the Internet
released
May 22, 2001
Contacts
David Moore
CAIDA
dmoore@sdsc.edu
858.534.5160
Diana Steele
UCSD Jacobs School of Engineering
dsteele@soe.ucsd.edu
858.534.2920
Alexandra Kostenko
Asta Networks
alex@astanetworks.com
206.264.2444 x311
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO Using a new technique, UCSD
network researchers from the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) and
the Jacobs School of Engineering have analyzed the worldwide pattern of
malicious denial-of-service (DoS) attacks against the computers of
corporations, universities, and private individuals. The attacks disable
Web servers on the Internet by overloading them with messages, which
usually contain false source addresses to conceal the locations of the
attackers. But in a clever twist, the researchers used key features of
these messages' forged signatures to detect and track the attacks.
"We believe that our research provides the only publicly available data
quantifying denial-of-service activity in the Internet," said David
Moore, a senior researcher in UCSD's Cooperative Association for
Internet Data Analysis (CAIDA) program at SDSC. Moore and UCSD Computer
Science and Engineering professors Geoff Voelker and Stefan Savage have
devised a new technique called "backscatter analysis" that gives an
estimate of worldwide denial-of-service activity. Their research enables
network engineers to understand the nature of recent attacks and to
study long-term trends and recurring patterns of attacks.
The researchers collected and analyzed three week-long data sets to
assess the number, duration, and focus of attacks, and to characterize
their behavior. In these three time windows, they observed more than
12,000 attacks against more than 5,000 distinct targets, ranging from
well known e-commerce companies such as Amazon.com and Hotmail to small
foreign Internet service providers and even individual personal
computers on dial-up connections. Some of the attacks flooded their
targets with more than 600,000 message packets per second.
"We were a bit surprised by what we found," Voelker said. "First, a
significant percentage of attacks are directed against home machines,
users with dial-up and broadband modem connections. Some of these
attacksespecially those against cable modem userscan be pretty
severe, with rates in the thousands of packets per second. This suggests
that minor denial-of-service attacks are frequently being used in
personal vendettas."
A small but significant fraction of attacks are directed against network
infrastructure. Between two and three percent of attacks target name
servers, and one to three percent target routers. The researchers view
this as particularly disturbing, since overwhelming a router could deny
service to all end hosts that rely upon that router for connectivity.
"We also were surprised at the diversity of commercial targets," Moore
explained. "We expected to see attacks on high-profile Internet sites,
including aol.com, akamai.com, amazon.com and hotmail.comand we did.
But we also saw attacks against a large range of smaller and
medium-sized businesses."
"We saw an odd, disproportionate concentration of attacks toward a small
group of countries," Savage said. "Surprisingly, Romania (.ro), a
country with a relatively poor networking infrastructure, was targeted
nearly as frequently as the .net and .com top-level domains, and Brazil
(.br) was targeted almost more than .edu and .org combined. Canada,
Germany, and the United Kingdom each were targeted by one to two percent
of the attacks."
The majority of victims (65%) were attacked only once, and many of the
remaining victims (18%) were attacked twice. Most victims (95%) were
attacked no more than five times. But a handful of sites were attacked
quite often. In the trace period, one host was besieged 48 times by
attacks that lasted from 72 seconds to five hours (at times
simultaneously). Five victims were attacked 60 to 70 times, and one
unfortunate victim was attacked 102 times in the course of a week.
A summary of the researchers' methods and results was presented on May
21 at the spring 2001 meeting of the North American Network Operators'
Group (NANOG) in Scottsdale, Arizona. The preprint of a complete
technical paper to be presented on August 15 at the 2001 USENIX Security
Symposium in Washington D.C. is available on the Web at
http://www.caida.org/outreach/papers/backscatter/.
"To conceal their identities, attackers usually forgeor 'spoof'the
IP source address of each packet they send in a denial-of-service
flood, so the packets appear to the victim to be arriving from one or
more third parties," said Savage, who is also chief scientist of Asta
Networks. "The key to our technique is that most automated flood recipes
select a random source address for each packet sent. The victim receives
a spoofed packet and tries to send an appropriate response to the faked
IP address; because the attacker's source address is selected at random,
the victim's responses are scattered across the entire Internet address
space, an effect called 'backscatter.'"
By observing a large enough address range, the researchers can
effectively sample all such denial-of-service activity on the Internet.
Contained in these samples are the identity of the victim, information
about the kind of attack, and a timestamp with which they estimated
attack duration. They also used the average arrival rate of unsolicited
responses directed at the monitored address range to estimate the actual
rate of the attack being directed at the victim.
A number of people contributed to the attack analysis effort. David
Wetherall and Gretta Bartels at Asta Networks donated their time, data,
and insight. Brian Kantor and Jim Madden of UCSD provided access to key
network resources and clarified the local network topology. Vern Paxson
of ACIRI and K. Claffy and Colleen Shannon of CAIDA provided assistance
and valuable advice. Support for this work was provided by DARPA NGI
Contract N66001-98-2-8922, NSF grant NCR-9711092, and Asta Networks.
CAIDA is a program of the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), an
organized research unit of UCSD. CAIDA creates tools and technologies
for Internet measurement, message traffic analysis, and network topology
visualization for use by network engineers and researchers. CAIDA also
sponsors education and outreach efforts such as the Internet Engineering
Curriculum Repository.
UCSD's Department of Computer Science and Engineering, a division of the
Jacobs School of Engineering, is ranked among the top 20 such
departments in the country. The faculty excel in a wide variety of
fields, including Internet technologies, bioinformatics, security and
cryptography, high-performance computer architecture, VLSI, distributed
systems, databases, software engineering, parallel computing, artificial
intelligence, and theoretical computer science.
For more information on CAIDA, see http://www.caida.org/. For more
information on SDSC, see http://www.sdsc.edu/. For more information on
the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at UCSD, see
http://www.cs.ucsd.edu/. For more information on Asta Networks, see
http://www.astanetworks.com/.
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