TY - JOUR
T1 - Characterizing Android apps’ behavior for effective detection of malapps at large scale
AU - Wang, Xing
AU - Wang, Wei
AU - He, Yongzhong
AU - Liu, Jiqiang
AU - Han, Zhen
AU - Zhang, Xiangliang
N1 - KAUST Repository Item: Exported on 2020-10-01
Acknowledgements: The work reported in this paper was supported in part by the Scientific Research Foundation through the Returned Overseas Chinese Scholars, Ministry of Education of China, under Grant K14C300020, in part by Shanghai Key Laboratory of Integrated Administration Technologies for Information Security, under Grant AGK2015002, in part by ZTE Corporation Foundation, and in part by National Natural Science Foundation of China, under Grant 61672092.
PY - 2017/5/6
Y1 - 2017/5/6
N2 - Android malicious applications (malapps) have surged and been sophisticated, posing a great threat to users. How to characterize, understand and detect Android malapps at a large scale is thus a big challenge. In this work, we are motivated to discover the discriminatory and persistent features extracted from Android APK files for automated malapp detection at a large scale. To achieve this goal, firstly we extract a very large number of features from each app and categorize the features into two groups, namely, app-specific features as well as platform-defined features. These feature sets will then be fed into four classifiers (i.e., Logistic Regression, linear SVM, Decision Tree and Random Forest) for the detection of malapps. Secondly, we evaluate the persistence of app-specific and platform-defined features on classification performance with two data sets collected in different time periods. Thirdly, we comprehensively analyze the relevant features selected by Logistic Regression classifier to identify the contributions of each feature set. We conduct extensive experiments on large real-world app sets consisting of 213,256 benign apps collected from six app markets, 4,363 benign apps from Google Play market, and 18,363 malapps. The experimental results and our analysis give insights regarding what discriminatory features are most effective to characterize malapps for building an effective and efficient malapp detection system. With the selected discriminatory features, the Logistic Regression classifier yields the best true positive rate as 96% with a false positive rate as 0.06%.
AB - Android malicious applications (malapps) have surged and been sophisticated, posing a great threat to users. How to characterize, understand and detect Android malapps at a large scale is thus a big challenge. In this work, we are motivated to discover the discriminatory and persistent features extracted from Android APK files for automated malapp detection at a large scale. To achieve this goal, firstly we extract a very large number of features from each app and categorize the features into two groups, namely, app-specific features as well as platform-defined features. These feature sets will then be fed into four classifiers (i.e., Logistic Regression, linear SVM, Decision Tree and Random Forest) for the detection of malapps. Secondly, we evaluate the persistence of app-specific and platform-defined features on classification performance with two data sets collected in different time periods. Thirdly, we comprehensively analyze the relevant features selected by Logistic Regression classifier to identify the contributions of each feature set. We conduct extensive experiments on large real-world app sets consisting of 213,256 benign apps collected from six app markets, 4,363 benign apps from Google Play market, and 18,363 malapps. The experimental results and our analysis give insights regarding what discriminatory features are most effective to characterize malapps for building an effective and efficient malapp detection system. With the selected discriminatory features, the Logistic Regression classifier yields the best true positive rate as 96% with a false positive rate as 0.06%.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10754/623405
UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167739X17307720
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85019842481&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.future.2017.04.041
DO - 10.1016/j.future.2017.04.041
M3 - Article
SN - 0167-739X
VL - 75
SP - 30
EP - 45
JO - Future Generation Computer Systems
JF - Future Generation Computer Systems
ER -