4.5 Article

Foureye: Defensive Deception Against Advanced Persistent Threats via Hypergame Theory

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNSM.2021.3117698

Keywords

Games; Uncertainty; Nash equilibrium; Analytical models; Stochastic processes; Reconnaissance; Predictive models; Defensive deception; hypergame theory; uncertainty; attacker; defender; advanced persistent threat

Funding

  1. Army Research Laboratory [W911NF-19-2-0150]
  2. Army Research Office [W91NF-20-2-0140]

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Defensive deception techniques are a promising proactive defense mechanism that can achieve attack failure by manipulating an attacker's beliefs. This study formulates a hypergame between an attacker and a defender, considering their subjective beliefs under uncertainty, and demonstrates through simulation experiments the effective use of defensive deception techniques in dealing with multi-staged APT attacks.
Defensive deception techniques have emerged as a promising proactive defense mechanism to mislead an attacker and thereby achieve attack failure. However, most game-theoretic defensive deception approaches have assumed that players maintain consistent views under uncertainty. They do not consider players' possible, subjective beliefs formed due to asymmetric information given to them. In this work, we formulate a hypergame between an attacker and a defender where they can interpret the same game differently and accordingly choose their best strategy based on their respective beliefs. This gives a chance for defensive deception strategies to manipulate an attacker's belief, which is the key to the attacker's decision-making. We consider advanced persistent threat (APT) attacks, which perform multiple attacks in the stages of the cyber kill chain (CKC) where both the attacker and the defender aim to select optimal strategies based on their beliefs. Through extensive simulation experiments, we demonstrated how effectively the defender can leverage defensive deception techniques while dealing with multi-staged APT attacks in a hypergame in which the imperfect information is reflected based on perceived uncertainty, cost, and expected utilities of both the attacker and defender, the system lifetime (i.e., mean time to security failure), and improved false-positive rates of intrusion detection.

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