SpamFlow
Overview
- What:
SpamFlow is a spam detection technique that relies on neither
content nor reputation analysis. Instead, this work investigates the
discriminatory power of the email TCP packet stream.
- Why:
Spam's low penetration rate requires that spammers send extremely large volumes
of mail, increasingly through botnets, in order to remain commercially viable.
Botnet hosts are typically widely distributed with low, asymmetric bandwidth
Internet connections. Therefore, while legitimate mail traffic is
well-behaved, we observe small congestion windows, retransmissions, loss and
large latencies in spam flows.
- How:
Using machine learning and feature selection to identify the
most selective flow properties, thereby adapting to different networks and
users.
- Benefit:
By capitalizing on
spam's fundamental requirement to source large quantities of mail,
often from resource constrained hosts and networks, SpamFlow promises
a unique and difficult-to-subvert complement to existing spam defenses.
Paper
Exploiting Transport-Level Characteristics of Spam
Robert Beverly and Karen Sollins
Fifth Conference on Email and AntiSpam
(CEAS2008),
Mountain View, CA, August 2008.
[Full Technical Report]
FAQ
Frequently Asked SpamFlow Questions
Software
Coming soon... please contact us if interested.
CEAS2008 Notes
My notes from the
Conference on Email and AntiSpam
are available on-line here.
Contact Information
Please direct questions, comments and flames toward SpamFlow's
author:
Rob Beverly
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