AV-Meter: An Evaluation of Antivirus Scans and Labels
2014; Springer Science+Business Media; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1007/978-3-319-08509-8_7
ISSN1611-3349
Autores Tópico(s)Spam and Phishing Detection
ResumoAntivirus scanners are designed to detect malware and, to a lesser extent, to label detections based on a family association. The labeling provided by AV vendors has many applications such as guiding efforts of disinfection and countermeasures, intelligence gathering, and attack attribution, among others. Furthermore, researchers rely on AV labels to establish a baseline of ground truth to compare their detection and classification algorithms. This is done despite many papers pointing out the subtle problem of relying on AV labels. However, the literature lacks any systematic study on validating the performance of antivirus scanners, and the reliability of those labels or detection. In this paper, we set out to answer several questions concerning the detection rate, correctness of labels, and consistency of detection of AV scanners. Equipped with more than 12,000 malware samples of 11 malware families that are manually inspected and labeled, we pose the following questions. How do antivirus vendors perform relatively on them? How correct are the labels given by those vendors? How consistent are antivirus vendors among each other? We answer those questions unveiling many interesting results, and invite the community to challenge assumptions about relying on antivirus scans and labels as a ground truth for malware analysis and classification. Finally, we stress several research directions that may help addressing the problem.
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