scholarly journals Informing Cyber Threat Intelligence through Dark Web Situational Awareness: The AZSecure Hacker Assets Portal

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Sagar Samtani ◽  
Weifeng Li ◽  
Victor Benjamin ◽  
Hsinchun Chen

To increase situational awareness, major cybersecurity platforms offer Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) about emerging cyber threats, key threat actors, and their modus operandi. However, this intelligence is often reactive, as it analyzes event log files after attacks have already occurred, lacking more active scrutiny of potential threats brewing in cyberspace before an attack has occurred. One intelligence source receiving significant attention is the Dark Web, where significant quantities of malicious hacking tools and other cyber assets are hosted. We present the AZSecure Hacker Assets Portal (HAP). The Dark Web-based HAP collects, analyzes, and reports on the major Dark Web data sources to offer unique perspective of hackers, their cybercriminal assets, and their intentions and motivations, ultimately contributing CTI insights to improve situational awareness. HAP currently supports 200+ users internationally from academic institutions such as UT San Antonio and National Taiwan University, law enforcement entities such as Calgary and Ontario Provincial Police, and industry organizations including General Electric and PayPal.

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Randa Basheer ◽  
Bassel Alkhatib

From proactive detection of cyberattacks to the identification of key actors, analyzing contents of the Dark Web plays a significant role in deterring cybercrimes and understanding criminal minds. Researching in the Dark Web proved to be an essential step in fighting cybercrime, whether with a standalone investigation of the Dark Web solely or an integrated one that includes contents from the Surface Web and the Deep Web. In this review, we probe recent studies in the field of analyzing Dark Web content for Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI), introducing a comprehensive analysis of their techniques, methods, tools, approaches, and results, and discussing their possible limitations. In this review, we demonstrate the significance of studying the contents of different platforms on the Dark Web, leading new researchers through state-of-the-art methodologies. Furthermore, we discuss the technical challenges, ethical considerations, and future directions in the domain.


Information ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 305
Author(s):  
Paulo Shakarian

Scientific work that leverages information about communities on the deep and dark web has opened up new angles in the field of security informatics. [...]


10.29007/nkfk ◽  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Azene Zenebe ◽  
Mufaro Shumba ◽  
Andrei Carillo ◽  
Sofia Cuenca

In the darknet, hackers are constantly sharing information with each other and learning from each other. These conversations in online forums for example can contain data that may help assist in the discovery of cyber threat intelligence. Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) is information or knowledge about threats that can help prevent security breaches in cyberspace. In addition, monitoring and analysis of this data manually is challenging because forum posts and other data on the darknet are high in volume and unstructured. This paper uses descriptive analytics and predicative analytics using machine learning on forum posts dataset from darknet to discover valuable cyber threat intelligence. The IBM Watson Analytics and WEKA machine learning tool were used. Watson Analytics showed trends and relationships in the data. WEKA provided machine learning models to classify the type of exploits targeted by hackers from the form posts. The results showed that Crypter, Password cracker and RATs (Remote Administration Tools), buffer overflow exploit tools, and Keylogger system exploits tools were the most common in the darknet and that there are influential authors who are frequent in the forums. In addition, machine learning helps build classifiers for exploit types. The Random Forest classifier provided a higher accuracy than the Random Tree and Naïve Bayes classifiers. Therefore, analyzing darknet forum posts can provide actionable information as well as machine learning is effective in building classifiers for prediction of exploit types. Predicting exploit types as well as knowing patterns and trends on hackers’ plan helps defend the cyberspace proactively.


Author(s):  
John Robertson ◽  
Ahmad Diab ◽  
Ericsson Marin ◽  
Eric Nunes ◽  
Vivin Paliath ◽  
...  

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