DomainPrio: Prioritizing Domain Name Investigations to Improve SOC Efficiency

Security Operations Centers (SOCs) are in need of automation for triaging alerts. Current approaches focus on analyzing and enriching individual alerts. We take a different approach and analyze the population of alerts. In an observational study over 24 weeks, we find a surprising pattern: some doma...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE access 2022, Vol.10, p.34352-34368
Hauptverfasser: Chiba, Daiki, Akiyama, Mitsuaki, Otsuki, Yuto, Hada, Hiroki, Yagi, Takeshi, Fiebig, Tobias, Van Eeten, Michel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Security Operations Centers (SOCs) are in need of automation for triaging alerts. Current approaches focus on analyzing and enriching individual alerts. We take a different approach and analyze the population of alerts. In an observational study over 24 weeks, we find a surprising pattern: some domains get analyzed again and again by different analysts, without coming to a final evaluation. Overall, 19% of the domains trigger 74% of all investigations. The most time-consuming domains are classified as false positives and "potentially unwanted programs"-the lowest threat level. To increase SOC efficiency, we design DomainPrio, a tool that prioritizes domains that are likely to be the subject of repeated, incomplete investigations. This enables us to indicate to the first analyst encountering this domain that the investigation should be, if possible, completed on this first attempt, so future investigations on the same domain can be prevented. DomainPrio is able to predict these domains with 89% accuracy and does so with an interpretable and auditable logistic regression model. When evaluating our tool on 100 days of data from a production setting, we find that it can potentially reduce the number of alert investigations by up to 35%, presenting the SOC with very substantial efficiency gains.
ISSN:2169-3536
2169-3536
DOI:10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3161636