Advanced machine learning techniques and meta-heuristic optimization for the detection of masquerading attacks in social networks

  1. Villar Rodríguez, Esther
Supervised by:
  1. Sancho Salcedo Sanz Director
  2. Javier del Ser Lorente Co-director

Defence university: Universidad de Alcalá

Fecha de defensa: 11 December 2015

Committee:
  1. José Antonio Portilla Figueras Chair
  2. Lucas Cuadra Rodríguez Secretary
  3. Antonio González Pardo Committee member
  4. Carlos Casanova Mateo Committee member
  5. David Camacho Fernández Committee member

Type: Thesis

Teseo: 539665 DIALNET lock_openTESEO editor

Abstract

According to the report published by the online protection firm Iovation in 2012, cyber fraud ranged from 1 percent of the Internet transactions in North America Africa to a 7 percent in Africa, most of them involving credit card fraud, identity theft, and account takeover or hijacking attempts. This kind of crime is still growing due to the advantages offered by a non face-to-face channel where a increasing number of unsuspecting victims divulges sensitive information. Interpol classifies these illegal activities into 3 types: • Attacks against computer hardware and software. • Financial crimes and corruption. • Abuse, in the form of grooming or “sexploitation”. Most research efforts have been focused on the target of the crime developing different strategies depending on the casuistic. Thus, for the well-known phising, stored blacklist or crime signals through the text are employed eventually designing adhocdetectors hardly conveyed to other scenarios even if the background is widely shared. Identity theft or masquerading can be described as a criminal activity oriented towards the misuse of those stolen credentials to obtain goods or services by deception. On March 4, 2005, a million of personal and sensitive information such as credit card and social security numbers was collected by White Hat hackers at Seattle University who just surfed the Web for less than 60 minutes by means of the Google search engine. As a consequence they proved the vulnerability and lack of protection with a mere group of sophisticated search terms typed in the engine whose large data warehouse still allowed showing company or government websites data temporarily cached. As aforementioned, platforms to connect distant people in which the interaction isundirected pose a forcible entry for unauthorized thirds who impersonate the licit user in a attempt to go unnoticed with some malicious, not necessarily economic, interests. In fact, the last point in the list above regarding abuses has become a major and a terrible risk along with the bullying being both by means of threats, harassment or even self-incrimination likely to drive someone to suicide, depression or helplessness. Therefore, impersonation consists of any criminal activity in which someone assumes a false identity and acts as his or her assumed character with intent to get a pecuniary benefit or cause some harm. User profiling, in turn, is the process of harvesting user information in order to construct a rich template with all the advantageous attributes in the field at hand and with specific purposes. User profiling is often employed as a mechanism for recommendation of items or useful information which has not yet considered by the client. Nevertheless, deriving user tendency or preferences can be also exploited to define the inherent behavior and address the problem of impersonation by detecting outliers or strange deviations prone to entail a potential attack