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CODE RED WORM PROPAGATION MODELING AND ANALYSIS Cliff Changchun Zou, Weibo Gong, Don Towsley
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Introduction The Code Red worm incident of July 2001 has stimulated activities to model and analyze Internet worm propagation. Previous works didn’t consider two factors affecting Code Red propagation Dynamic countermeasures taken by ISPs and users The slowed down worm infection rate Two factor worm model
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Background on Code Red Worm Code Red worm exploited Windows IIS vulnerability on Windows 2000 Each worm copy generated 100 threads 99 threads randomly chose one IP address to attack Timeout: 21 seconds
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Background on Code Red Worm
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Using Epidemic Models to Model Code Red Worm Propagation Computer viruses and worms are similar to biological viruses on their self-replicating and propagation behavior Introduce two classical epidemic models as the bases of the two-factor internet worm model Classical simple epidemic model Kermack-Mckendrick model
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Classical Simple Epidemic Model J(t): the number of infected hosts at time t : infection rate S(t): the number of susceptible hosts at time t N: size of population At t=0: J(0) hosts are infected and other N-J(0) hosts are all susceptible
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Classical Simple Epidemic Model Let, dividing both sides by N^2 where
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Classical Simple Epidemic Model The classical epidemic model can match the beginning phase of Code Red spreading, it can’t explain the later part of Code Red propagation: during the last five hours from 20:00 to 00:00 UTC, the worm scans kept decreasing
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Kermack-Mckendrick Model Considers the removal process of infectious hosts Once a host recovers from the disease, it will be immune to the disease forever – “removed” state I(t): the number of infections hosts at time t R(t): the number of removed hosts from previously infectious hosts at time t
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Kermack-Mckendrick Model Base on the simple epidemic model, Kermack-Mckendrick Model is: J(t): the number of infected hosts at time t : removal rate of infectious hosts : infection rate N: size of population
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Kermack-Mckendrick Model Define If the initial number of susceptible hosts is smaller than some critical value, there will be no epidemic and outbreak
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Kermack-Mckendrick Model The Kermack-Mckendrick model improves the classical simple epidemic model by considering that some infectious hosts either recover or die after some time, but still not suitable for modeling Internet worm propagation Removal only from the infectious hosts Assume infection rate to be constant
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A NEWINTERNET WORMMODEL: TWO-FACTOR WORM MODEL Two factors affecting Code Red worm propagation Human countermeasures Decreased infection rate
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A NEWINTERNET WORMMODEL: TWO-FACTOR WORM MODEL According to the same principle in deriving the Kermack-Mckendrick Model: In order to solve the equation, we have to know the dynamic properties of, and
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A NEWINTERNET WORMMODEL: TWO-FACTOR WORM MODEL Use the same assumption as what Kermack- McKendrick model uses: The removal process from susceptible hosts looks similar to a typical epidemic propagation:
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A NEWINTERNET WORMMODEL: TWO-FACTOR WORM MODEL Last, we model the decrease infection rate by the equation: : initial infection rate : used to adjust the infection rate sensitivity to the number of infection hosts
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A NEWINTERNET WORMMODEL: TWO-FACTOR WORM MODEL For parameters N=1000000, I(0)=1, =3, r=0.05, u=0.06/N, =0.8/N
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Simulation
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Conclusion Considering human countermeasures taken by ISPs and users and the slowed down worm infection rate, two-factor worm model match the observed data better than previous models do The two-factor worm model is a general Internet worm model for modeling worms by adjusting different parameters
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