38,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 6-10 Tagen
payback
19 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

The most widely publicized, and arguably most damaging, types of malicious traffic on the Internet today include worms, spam, viruses and denial of service attacks. Internet worms self propagate across networks exploiting flaws in operating systems and services, spreading viruses and congesting network links. It is the aim of this dissertation to investigate approaches for detecting a wide range of malicious activity such as worms and (d)DoS. This dissertation describes the design and implementation of a framework for distributed intrusion detection. The framework features heterogeneous…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The most widely publicized, and arguably most
damaging, types of malicious traffic on the
Internet today include worms, spam, viruses and
denial of service attacks. Internet worms
self propagate across networks exploiting flaws in
operating systems and services,
spreading viruses and congesting network links. It is
the aim of this dissertation to investigate
approaches for detecting a wide range of malicious
activity such as worms and (d)DoS. This dissertation
describes the design and implementation of a
framework for distributed intrusion detection. The
framework features heterogeneous sensors with a
configurable event source that can adapt by
dynamically composing components at run-time. The
sensors are controlled remotely by a management
application that can configure, extend and control
sensors individually. The framework is
extensible and allows researchers to quickly
implement and evaluate detection techniques
in a live network environment. It was found that the
framework could successfully detect a range of
malicious activity including worms on both low
utilisation dial-up links and gateway router links.
Autorenporträt
Dr. Éamonn Linehan is a research fellow in the Distributed
Systems Group at Trinity College Dublin. His current research
interests include geometric models for ubiquitous computing and
middleware support for mobile, context-aware applications.