Title
di-jest: Autonomic neighbour management for worm resilience in p2p systems
Abstract
Internet worms pose a serious and ongoing threat to system security, often resulting in significant service downtime and disruption. In recent years peer-to-peer (p2p) networks have become a target for the deployment of worms as their high connectivity allows for rapid dissemination and homogeneity of the adopted software platform ensures the existence of common susceptibilities. In this paper we observe that peer similarity in p2p networks can greatly increase overall vulnerability; peers with largely different system characteristics are unlikely to be infected by the same worm. With this in mind we present dijest — an autonomic method for neighbour selection based on heterogeneity. Our results show the efficacy of di-jest in reducing the spread rate and potency of p2p worms. By selecting neighbours with different system characteristics dijest can reduce the number of peers infected by a worm by up to 80%.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1109/WOWMOM.2008.4594898
Newport Beach, CA
Keywords
Field
DocType
p2p system,autonomic neighbour management,system security,different system characteristics dijest,worm resilience,high connectivity,present dijest,autonomic method,p2p worm,common susceptibility,internet worm,different system characteristic,p2p network,java,operating systems,protocols,resilience,internet,application software,servers,information security,p2p,security,xml
Psychological resilience,Software deployment,Computer security,Computer science,Server,Computer network,Information security,Application software,Downtime,The Internet,Vulnerability
Conference
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
978-1-4244-2100-8
3
0.41
References 
Authors
19
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Douglas McIlwraith140.77
Micael Paquier230.41
Evangelos Kotsovinos336122.80