Xander Bouwman, Delft University of Technology; Victor Le Pochat, imec-DistriNet, KU Leuven; Pawel Foremski, Farsight Security, Inc. / IITiS PAN; Tom Van Goethem, imec-DistriNet, KU Leuven; Carlos H. Gañán, Delft University of Technology and ICANN; Giovane C. M. Moura, SIDN Labs; Samaneh Tajalizadehkhoob, ICANN; Wouter Joosen, imec-DistriNet, KU Leuven; Michel van Eeten, Delft University of Technology
We tracked the largest volunteer security information sharing community known to date: the COVID-19 Cyber Threat Coalition, with over 4,000 members. This enabled us to address long-standing questions on threat information sharing. First, does collaboration at scale lead to better coverage? And second, does making threat data freely available improve the ability of defenders to act? We found that the CTC mostly aggregated existing industry sources of threat information. User-submitted domains often did not make it to the CTC's blocklist as a result of the high threshold posed by its automated quality assurance using VirusTotal. Although this ensured a low false positive rate, it also caused the focus of the blocklist to drift away from domains related to COVID-19 (1.4%-3.6%) to more generic abuse, such as phishing, for which established mitigation mechanisms already exist. However, in the slice of data that was related to COVID-19, we found promising evidence of the added value of a community like the CTC: just 25.1% of these domains were known to existing abuse detection infrastructures at time of listing, as compared to 58.4% of domains on the overall blocklist. From the unique experiment that the CTC represented, we draw three lessons for future threat data sharing initiatives.
Open Access Media
USENIX is committed to Open Access to the research presented at our events. Papers and proceedings are freely available to everyone once the event begins. Any video, audio, and/or slides that are posted after the event are also free and open to everyone. Support USENIX and our commitment to Open Access.
author = {Xander Bouwman and Victor Le Pochat and Pawel Foremski and Tom Van Goethem and Carlos H. Ganan and Giovane C. M. Moura and Samaneh Tajalizadehkhoob and Wouter Joosen and Michel van Eeten},
title = {Helping hands: Measuring the impact of a large threat intelligence sharing community},
booktitle = {31st USENIX Security Symposium (USENIX Security 22)},
year = {2022},
isbn = {978-1-939133-31-1},
address = {Boston, MA},
pages = {1149--1165},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity22/presentation/bouwman},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = aug
}