Title
Measuring Network Reputation in the Ad-Bidding Process.
Abstract
Online advertising is a multi-billion dollar market, and therefore a target for abuse by Internet criminals. Prior work has shown millions of dollars of advertisers’ capital are lost due to ad abuse and focused on defense from the perspective of the end-host or the local network egress point. We investigate the potential of using public threat data to measure and detect adware and malicious affiliate traffic from the perspective of demand side platforms, which facilitate ad bidding between ad exchanges and advertisers. Our results show that malicious ad campaigns have statistically significant differences in traffic and lookup patterns from benign ones, however, public blacklists can only label a small percentage of ad publishers (0.27%), which suggests new lists dedicated to ad abuse should be created. Furthermore, we show malicious infrastructure on ad exchanges can be tracked with simple graph analysis and maliciousness heuristics.
Year
Venue
Field
2017
DIMVA
Advertising,Computer science,Online advertising,Heuristics,Advertising campaign,Local area network,Bidding,The Internet,Adware,Reputation
DocType
Citations 
PageRank 
Conference
1
0.36
References 
Authors
11
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Yizheng Chen1606.91
Yacin Nadji232215.31
Rosa Romero Gómez3223.71
Manos Antonakakis470236.70
David Dagon51635131.25