Kaspersky Lab Whitepaper Machine Learning
Kaspersky Lab Whitepaper Machine Learning
Machine Learning
for Malware Detection
www.kaspersky.com
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02
Contents
03
Machine Learning Methods
for Malware Detection
In this paper, we summarize our extensive experience using machine learning to build
advanced protection for our customers.
Basic approaches
to malware detection
An efficient, robust and scalable malware recognition module is the key
component of every cybersecurity product. Malware recognition modules
decide if an object is a threat, based on the data they have collected on it. This
data may be collected at different phases:
– P
re-execution phase data is anything you can tell about a file without
executing it. This may include executable file format descriptions, code
descriptions, binary data statistics, text strings and information extracted via
code emulation and other similar data.
– P
ost-execution phase data conveys information about behavior or events
caused by process activity in a system.
In the early part of the cyber era, the number of malware threats was relatively
low, and simple manually created pre-execution rules were often enough to
detect threats. The rapid rise of the Internet and the ensuing growth in malware
meant that manually created detection rules were no longer practical - and new,
advanced protection technologies were needed.
1
Machine learning:
concepts and definitions
According to the classic definition given by AI pioneer Arthur Samuel, machine
learning is a set of methods that gives computers “the ability to learn without
being explicitly programmed”.
Unsupervised learning
One machine learning approach is unsupervised learning. In this setting, we
are given only a data set without the right answers for the task. The goal is to
discover the structure of the data or the law of data generation.
Large unlabeled datasets are available to cybersecurity vendors and the cost
of their manual labeling by experts is high – this makes unsupervised learning
valuable for threat detection. Clustering can help to optimize efforts for the
manual labeling of new samples. With informative embedding, we can decrease
the number of labeled objects needed for the next machine learning approach in
our pipeline: supervised learning.
Supervised learning
Supervised learning is a setting that is used when both the data and the right
answers for each object are available. The goal is to fit the model that will
produce the right answers for new objects.
The task:
This training information is utilized during the training phase, when we search for
the best model that will produce the correct label Y for previously unseen objects
given the feature set X.
2
In the training phase, we need to select a family of models, for example, neural
networks or decision trees. Usually, each model in a family is determined by its
parameters. Training means that we search for the model from the selected family
with a particular set of parameters that gives the most accurate answers for the trained
model over the set of reference objects according to a particular metric. In other
words, we ’learn’ the optimal parameters that define valid mapping from X to Y.
After we have trained a model and verified its quality, we are ready for the next
phase – applying the model to new objects. In this phase, the type of the model
and its parameters do not change. The model only produces predictions.
In the case of malware detection, this is the protection phase. Vendors often
deliver a trained model to users where the product makes decisions based on
model predictions autonomously. Mistakes can cause devastating consequences
for a user – for example, removing an OS driver. It is crucial for the vendor to select
a model family properly. The vendor must use an efficient training procedure to
find the model with a high detection rate and a low false positive rate.
Training phase
Benign
executables
Malicious
executables Training Predictive model
Protection phase
Deep learning
Deep learning is a special machine learning approach that facilitates the extraction
of features of a high level of abstraction from low-level data. Deep learning has
proven successful in computer vision, speech recognition, natural language
processing and other tasks. It works best when you want the machine to infer
high-level meaning from low-level data. For image recognition challenges, like
ImageNet, deep learning-based approaches already surpass humans.
It is natural that cybersecurity vendors tried to apply deep learning for recognizing
malware from low-level data. A deep learning model can learn complex feature
hierarchies and incorporate diverse steps of malware detection pipeline into one
solid model that can be trained end-to-end, so that all of the components of the
model are learned simultaneously.
3
Machine learning application specifics
in cybersecurity
User products that implement machine learning make decisions autonomously.
The quality of the machine learning model impacts the user system performance
and its state. Because of this, machine learning-based malware detection has
specifics.
Generalizing this, we must train our models on a data set that correctly represents
the conditions where the model will be working in the real world. This makes the
task of collecting a representative dataset crucial for machine learning to be
successful.
This is still not enough, because new benign files that go unseen earlier may
occasionally be falsely detected. We take this into account and implement a
flexible design of a model that allows us to fix false-positives on the fly, without
completely retraining the model. Examples of this are implemented in our pre-
and post-execution models, which are described in the following sections.
4
Algorithms must allow us to quickly adapt them
to malware writers’ counteractions
Outside the malware detection domain, machine learning algorithms regularly
work under the assumption of fixed data distribution, which means that it
doesn’t change with time. When we have a training set that is large enough, we
can train the model so that it will effectively reason any new sample in a test set.
As time goes on, the model will continue working as expected.
After applying machine learning to malware detection, we have to face the fact
that our data distribution isn’t fixed:
This causes serious changes in data distribution and raises the problem of
detection rate degradation over time in any machine learning implementation.
Cybersecurity vendors that implement machine learning in their antimalware
solutions face this problem and need to overcome it. The architecture needs
to be flexible and has to allow model updates ‘on the fly’ between retraining.
Vendors must also have effective processes for collecting and labeling new
samples, enriching training datasets and regularly retraining models.
100%
Detection rate (% of malware detected)
80%
75%
70%
65%
60%
55%
50%
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
How long ago the model has been trained (months)
5
Kaspersky Lab machine learning
application
The aforementioned properties of real world malware detection make
straightforward application of machine learning techniques a challenging task.
Kaspersky Lab has almost a decade’s worth of experience when it comes to
utilizing machine learning methods in information security applications.
• code fragments
• hashes of code fragments or the whole file
• file properties
• and combinations of these features.
• Creating detection rules manually couldn’t keep up with the emerging flow of
malware.
• Checking each file’s fingerprint against a library of known malware meant that
you couldn’t detect new malware until analysts manually create a detection rule.
We were interested in features that were robust against small changes in a file.
These features would detect new modifications of malware, but would not
require more resources for calculation. Performance and scalability are the key
priorities of the first stages of anti-malware engine processing.
• calculated quickly, like statistics derived from file byte content or code
disassembly
• directly retrieved from the structure of the executable, like a file format
description.
Using this data, we calculated a specific type of hash functions called locality-
sensitive hashes (LSH).
6
Cryptographic hash
(hash values)
But we went further. The LSH calculation was unsupervised. It didn’t take into
account our additional knowledge of each sample being malware or benign.
• Our training data X would be pairs of file feature representations [X1, X2]
• Y would be the label that would tell us whether the objects were actually
semantically similar or not.
• During training, the algorithm fits parameters of hash mapping h(X) to
maximize the number of pairs from the training set, for which h(X1) and h(X2)
are identical for similar objects and different otherwise.
This algorithm that is being applied to executable file features provides specific
similarity hash mapping with useful detection capabilities. In fact, we train
several versions of this mapping that differ in their sensitivity to local variations
of different sets of features. For example, one version of similarity hash mapping
could be more focused on capturing the executable file structure, while paying
less attention to the actual content. Another could be more focused on capturing
the ASCII-strings of the file.
This captures the idea that different subsets of features could be more or less
discriminative to different kinds of malware files. For one of them, file content
statistics could reveal the presence of an unknown malicious packer. For the
others, the most important piece of information regarding potential behavior is
concentrated in strings representing used OS API, created file names, accessed
URLs or other feature subsets.
7
Two-stage pre-execution detection on users’
computers with similarity hash mapping
combined with decision trees ensemble
To analyze files during the pre-execution stage, our products combine
a similarity hashing approach with other trained algorithms in a two-stage
scheme. To train this model, we use a large collection of files that we know
to be malware and benign.
Feature Y
L-1 L L+1
Hard region:
decision trees
ensemble
Simple region:
similarity hash
Feature X
Schematic representation of segmentation of the object-space created with similarity hash mapping. For simplicity, the
illustration has only two dimensions. An index of each cell corresponds to the particular similarity hash mapping value. Each cell
of the grid illustrates a region of objects with the same value of similarity hash mapping, also known as a hash bucket. Dot colors:
malicious (red) and benign/unknown (green). Two options are available: add the hash of a region to the malware database (simple
regions) or use it as the first part of the two-stage detector combined with a region-specific classifier (hard regions).
In our products, the two-stage analysis works in the following way. In the pre-
detect stage, learned similarity hash mapping is calculated for the lightweight
features of the scanned file. Then, it’s checked to see if there are any other files
with the same hash mapping, and whether they are malware or benign. A group of
files with a similar hash mapping value is called a hash bucket. Depending on the
hash bucket that the scanned file falls into, the following outcomes may occur:
• In a simple region case, the file falls into a bucket that contains only one kind
of object: malware or benign. If a file falls into a ‘pure malware bucket’ we
detect it as malware. If it falls to a ‘pure benign bucket’ we don’t scan it any
deeper. In both cases, we do not extract any new ‘heavy’ features.
8
• In a hard region, the hash bucket contains both malware and benign files. It is
the only case when the system may extract ‘heavy’ features from the scanned
file for precise detection. For each hard region, there is a separate region
specific classifier trained. Currently we use a modification of a decision tree
ensemble or a ‘heavy’ feature-based similarity hashing, depending on what is
more effective in each hard region.
In reality, there are some hard regions that are not suitable for further analysis
by this two-stage technology, because they contain too many popular benign
files. Processing them with this method yields a high risk of false positives and
performance degradation. For such cases, we do not train a region specific
classifier and do not scan files in this region through this model. For correct
analysis in a region like this we use other detection technologies.
f₁ 5
f₁ 5
Model 1 f₂ 7
f₂ 7
... ... Class labels:
PE ... malware
File ... or benign
Model L
...
Malware.exe ... fk 2
fk 2
...
fn 12
Get lightweight Map to pre-detect Search Region Get heavy Apply region-specific
features region Model features classifier
• In the first (pre-detect) stage, we do not enable detection with region specific
classifiers in regions with a high risk of false positives. Because of this, the
distribution of objects passed to the second stage is biased towards the
“malware” class. This reduces the false positive rate, too.
• In the second stage, classifiers in each hard region are trained on malware
from only one bucket—but on all clean objects available in all the buckets
of the training set. This makes a regional classifier detect the malware of a
particular hard region bucket more precisely. It also prevents any unexpected
false positives, when the model works in products with real-world data.
Interpretability of the two-stage model comes from the fact that each hash
in a database is associated with some subset of malware samples in training.
The whole model could be adapted to a new daily malware stream via adding
detections, including hash mappings and tree ensemble models for a previously
unobserved region. This lets us revoke and retrain region specific classifiers
without significantly degrading the detection rate of the whole product. Without
this, we would need to retrain the whole model on all of the malware that we
know with every change we would want to make.
That being said, the two-stage malware detection is suitable for the specifics of
machine learning that were discussed in the introduction.
9
Deep learning against rare attacks
Typically, machine learning faces tasks when malicious and benign samples are
numerously represented in the training set. But some attacks are so rare that we
have only one example of malware for training. This is typical for high-profile
targeted attacks. In this case, we use a very specific deep learning-based model
architecture. We call this approach exemplar network (ExNet).
Malware X
Low-level
Object object
features Malware Y
Compact object
Multilayer representation
neural network Malware Z
Per-exemplar
classifiers
Machine Learning: exemplar network
The idea here is that we train the model to build compact representations
of input features. We then use them for the to simultaneously train multiple
per-exemplar classifiers – these are algorithms that detect particular types of
malware. Deep learning allows us to combine these multiple steps (object feature
extraction, compact feature representation and local, or per-exemplar, model
creation) into one neural network pipeline that distills the discriminative features
for various types of malware.
This model can efficiently generalize knowledge about single malware samples
and a large collection of clean samples. Then, it can detect new modifications of
corresponding malware.
We also use deep learning methods to address the task of behavior detection.
In the post-execution stage, we are working with behavior logs provided by
the threat behavior engine. The behavior log is the sequence of system events
occurring during the process execution, together with corresponding arguments.
In order to detect malicious activity in observed log data, our model compresses
the obtained sequence of events to a set of binary vectors. It then trains a deep
neural network to distinguish clean and malicious logs.
10
Log compression
Events
0644 0755 DeleteFile DeleteFile 1
CreateFile(”doc1.rtf”, 0755) ModifyFile 1
ModifyFile(”doc1.rtf”) CreateFile 0644 RenameFile 0 h(x)
DeleteFile CreateFile ...
0755 .
ModifyFile(”doc1.rtf”) “config.xml” 0.3
CreateFile(”list.rtf”, 0755) “doc1.rtf” ... . -4.5
list.rtf doc1.rtf “list.rtf” false 0 2.7
ModifyFile(”list.rtf”) ...
files 0
Popular tokens
ModifyFile(”config.xml”) CreateFile “config.xml” fopen 0 0.02
notepad.exe config.xml ModifyFile “list.rtf” ... . 7.1
ModifyFile(”doc1.rtf”)
“doc1.rtf” list 1 -3.8
DeleteFile(”doc1.rtf”) ... .
ModifyFile 40 0
DeleteFile(”list.rtf”) ModifyFile “notepad.exe”
“config.xml” 41 0
... 42 0
“list.rtf”
“doc1.rtf” ... .
1. The log is transformed into a bipartite behavior graph. This graph contains two
types of vertices: events and arguments. Edges are drawn between each event
and argument, which occur together in the same line in the log. Such a graph
representation is much more compact than the initial raw data. It stays robust
against any permutations of lines caused by tracing different runs of the same
multiprocessing program, or behavior obfuscation by the analyzed process.
2. After that, we automatically extract specific subgraphs, or behavior patterns,
from this graph. Each pattern contains a subset of events and adjacent arguments
related to a specific activity of the process, such as network communications, file
system exploration, modification of the system register, etc.
3. We compress each “behavior pattern” to a sparse binary vector. Each component
of this vector is responsible for the inclusion of a specific event or argument’s
token (related to web-, file- and other types of activity) in the template.
4. The trained deep neural network transforms sparse binary vectors of behavior
patterns into compact representations called pattern embeddings. Then they
are combined into a single vector, or log embedding, by taking the element-
wise maximum.
5. Finally, based on the log embedding, the network predicts the log’s
suspiciousness.
The main feature of the used neural network is that all the weights are positive and
all the activation functions are monotonic. These properties provide us with many
important advantages:
• Our model’s suspicion score output only grows with time while processing new
lines from the log. As a result, malware cannot evade detection by performing
additional noise or a ‘clean’ activity in parallel with its main payload.
• Since the model’s output is stable in time, we are probably protected from
eventual false alarms caused by the prediction’s fluctuation in the middle of
scanning of a clean log.
• Working with log samples in a monotonic space allows us to automatically select
events that cause the detection and manage false alarms more conveniently.
11
Applications in the infrastructure
From efficiently processing incoming streams of malware in Kaspersky Lab to
maintaining large-scale detection algorithms, machine learning plays an equally
important role in building a proper in-lab infrastructure.
Cluster 1
Cluster 2
Cluster 3
Incoming stream Clustering Human
of unknown and already annotation
classified objects
Cluster 4
Human
annotation
All recently received incoming files are analyzed by our in-lab malware detection
techniques, including pre- and post-execution. We aim to label as many objects as
possible, but some objects are still unclassified. We want to label them. For this, all
objects, including the labeled ones, are processed by multiple feature extractors.
Then, they are passed together through several clustering algorithms (e.g. K-means
and dbscan) depending on the file type. This produces groups of similar objects.
At this point, we face four different types of resulting clusters with unknown files:
For objects in the clusters of types 1-3, we use additional machine learning
algorithms like belief propagation to verify the similarity of unknown samples to
classified ones. In some cases this is effective even in the clusters of type 3. This
allows us to automatically label unknown files, leaving only the clusters of type
4, and partially of type 3, for humans. This results in a drastic reduction of the
human annotations needed on a daily basis.
12
Distillation: packing the updates
The way we detect malware in-lab is different from algorithms optimal for user
products. Some of the most powerful classification models require a large
amount of resources like CPU/GPU time and memory, along with expensive
feature extractors.
For example, since most of the modern malware writers use advanced packers
and obfuscators to hide payload functionality, machine learning models really
benefit from using execution logs from an in-lab sandbox with advanced
behavior logging. At the same time, gathering these kinds of logs in a pre-
execution phase on a user’s machine could be computationally intense. It could
result in notable system performance degradation.
It is more effective to keep and run those ‘heavy’ models in-lab. Once we know
that a particular file is malware, we use the knowledge we have gained from the
models to train lightweight classifiers that are going to work in our products.
Benign
executables
01 10 10
1. In our lab, we first extract some time-consuming features from labeled files
and train a ‘heavy’ in-lab model on them.
2. We take a pool of unknown files and use our ‘heavy’ in-lab model to label them.
3. Then, we use the newly labeled files to augment the training set for the
lightweight classification model.
4. We deliver the lightweight model to user products.
13
Summary
Passing routine tasks to an algorithm leaves more space for us to research and
create. This allows us to deliver better protection to our customers. Through
our efforts, failures and wins, we have learnt what is important when it comes to
letting machine learning make its superior impact on malware detection.
Highlights:
• Have the right data. This is the fuel of machine learning. The data must be
representative, relevant to the current malware landscape and correctly
labeled when needed. We became experts in extracting and preparing data
and training our algorithms. We made an efficient collection with billions of file
samples to empower machine learning.
14
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