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Experiences with Honeypot Systems: Development, Deployment, and Analysis
Kauai, Hawaii January 04-January 07
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/HICSS.2006.172Proceedings of the 39th Annual Hawaii ...
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Robert McGrew, Mississippi State University
Rayford B. Vaughn JR,, Mississippi State University
This paper presents a summary of university research performed on honeypot techniques and summarizes the results Honeypots are computing resources that serve no other purpose on a network than to be a target for attackers, and log data about the attacks. Low-interaction and high-interaction honeypots were implemented and deployed on a university network, and data was logged and analyzed about attacks that occurred during the honeypots? deployment. Current efforts in the "black hat" attacker community focusing on detecting and subverting honeypots are discussed, and recommendations are made to improve the usage of honeypots as an attack profiling tool by improving the control measures that make a honeypot easy to detect.
Citation:
Robert McGrew, Rayford B. Vaughn JR,, "Experiences with Honeypot Systems: Development, Deployment, and Analysis," hicss, vol. 9, pp.220a, Proceedings of the 39th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'06) Track 9, 2006
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