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Honeypots


{LANG_NAVORIGIN} Intrusion Detection Honeypots



Improving the Effectiveness of Deceptive Honeynets through an Empirical Learning Approach
This research is attempting to provide richer deception through the use an empirical learning approach to attacks and probes on systems. This research can be regarded as evolutionary:findings of one phase will be the focus and design of next phase. After testing the systems with attacking tools and improving them based on the results obtained from pre-selected hackers attacks, systems will be further tested to determine if the level of deception has further improved. Deceptive honeypots coupled with appropriate intrusion detection systems and firewalls may provide a means for providing much need forward intelligence about attackers and give defenders an increased reaction and countermeasure time window.
03/22/2004


Honeypots
Among other benefits, running a honeynet makes one acutely aware about "what is going on" out there. While placing a network IDS outside one's firewall might also provide a similar flood of alerts, a honeypot provides a unique prospective on what will be going on when a related server is compromised used by the intruders.
02/27/2004


Fun Things To Do With Your Honeypot
Most of the papers deal with the potential gains a honeypot can give you, and the proper way to monitor a honeypot. Not very many of them deal with the honeypots themselves.
02/27/2004


Wireless Honeypot Trickery
This paper will introduce honeypots as a countermeasure for wireless environments (more specifically, WiFi-related technologies). So, let's prepare to feed greedy blackhat people with waves of honey to defeat our happy attackers.
02/18/2004


Fighting Internet Worms With Honeypots
Paper covering different ways honeypots can be used to detect, identify, stop, and even strike back against worms, the plague of the Internet.
02/18/2004


The Use of Honeynets to Detect Exploited Systems Across Large Enterprise Networks
An extremely interesting paper written by Georgia Institute of Technology a IEEE security workshop. The Georgia Institute of Technology has several Honeynets deployed on a network of 30,000+ systems.
02/18/2004


Problems and Challenges with Honeypots
In this paper we take a look at some of the many challenges and problems facing honeypots, and possible approaches on how to solve them. By identifying these problems now, we can hope to make honeypots a stronger technology for the future.
02/18/2004


Open Source Honeypots: Learning with Honeyd
Honeypots are an exciting new technology. They allow us to turn the tables on the bad guys, we can take the initiative. In the past several years there has been growing interest in exactly what this technology is and how it works. The purpose of this paper is to introduce you to honeypots and demonstrate their capabilities.
02/18/2004


Honeytokens: The Other Honeypot.
The purpose of this series of honeypot papers is to cover the breadth of honeypot technologies, values and issues. I hope by now readers are beginning to understand that honeypots are an incredibly powerful and flexible technology. They have multiple applications to security, everything from simplified detection to advanced information gathering. Today we extend the capabilities of honeypots even further by discussing honeytokens. Honeytokens are everything a honeypot is, except they are not a computer.
02/18/2004


Honeypot Farms
For the past six months this series of papers has covered a breadth of honeypot topics. We have covered everything from what honeypots are, their value and different types, to common misconceptions and legal issues. However, one thing we have yet to discuss is deployment. How can you deploy honeypots in your environment? For small organizations, this may be easy -- nothing more then installing a honeypot on a single computer and placing it on your local network. But what about organizations with hundreds of networks and thousands of computers? How can honeypots be easily deployed and managed in such large, distributed environments? One approach is that you don't. Instead, you simply consolidate all of your honeypots in a single honeypot farm, then you let the bad guys come to you.
02/18/2004


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