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  • CS Colloquia: Filtering Spam with Behavioral Blacklisting

    Tue, Oct 23, 2007 @ 04:00 PM - 05:30 PM

    Thomas Lord Department of Computer Science

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Title: Filtering Spam with Behavioral BlacklistingSpeaker: Prof. Nick Feamster(GATECH)ABSTRACT:
    Spam filters often use the reputation of an IP address (or IP address
    range) to classify email senders. This approach worked well when most
    spam originated from senders with fixed IP addresses, but
    spam today is also sent from IP addresses for which blacklist
    maintainers have outdated or inaccurate information (or no information
    at all). Spam campaigns also involve many senders, reducing the amount
    of spam any particular IP address sends to a single domain; this method
    allows spammers to stay ''under the radar''. The dynamism of any
    particular IP address begs for blacklisting techniques that
    automatically adapt as the senders of spam change.We present SpamTracker, a spam filtering system that uses a new technique
    called behavioral blacklisting to classify email senders based on their
    sending behavior rather than their identity. Spammers cannot evade
    SpamTracker merely by using ''fresh'' IP addresses because blacklisting
    decisions are based on sending patterns, which tend to remain more invariant.
    SpamTracker uses fast clustering algorithms that react quickly to changes in
    sending patterns. We evaluate SpamTracker's ability to classify spammers using
    email logs for over 115 email domains; we find that SpamTracker can correctly
    classify many spammers missed by current filtering techniques.BIO:
    Nick Feamster is an assistant professor in the College of Computing at Georgia
    Tech. He received his Ph.D. in Computer science from MIT in 2005, and his S.B.
    and M.Eng. degrees in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT in
    2000 and 2001, respectively. His research focuses on many aspects of computer
    networking and networked systems, including the design, measurement, and
    analysis of network routing protocols, network security, anonymous
    communication systems, and adaptive streaming media protocols. His honors
    include award papers at SIGCOMM 2006 (network-level behavior of spammers), the
    NSDI 2005 conference (fault detection in router configuration), Usenix
    Security 2002 (circumventing web censorship using Infranet), and Usenix
    Security 2001 (web cookie analysis). He is also the recipient of an IBM
    Faculty Award.

    Location: Seaver Science Library (SSL) - 150

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: CS Colloquia

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