Paper: Behavioural Detection and Prevention of Malware on OS X

Though still well behind that of

Windows

malware, the prevalence of malware targeting

OS X

has increased in the past year to the point where Mac users can’t assume they are safe just because of the operation system they are using. The question of how to effectively detect new Mac malware is one that is becoming increasingly important for the security community.

Today, we publish a

paper

(also as

pdf

) by Vincent Van Mieghem, a former student at Delft University of Technology, who introduces a novel way of detecting malware running on

OS X

.

Vincent looked at patterns among the system calls used by known malware samples, and compared these to the calls used by legitimate software. This helped him to find patterns in the system calls that would be indicative of malicious behaviour.

He used this technique against a set of newly discovered malware samples and found a 100% detection rate. He also looked at false positives and found that it varied from 0% for typical users to 20% for ‘power users’ (who tend to use many developer tools, which often exhibit behaviours that are less easy to distinguish from those of malware).

The research was done as part of Vincent’s Master’s thesis, which he wrote during an internship at

Fox-IT

. (Vincent currently works for

PwC Cybersecurity

.)

Figure2-vanMieghem.jpg

The increasing prevalence of

OS X

malware is also reflected in the

VB2016 programme

, which includes several papers on the subject.

Registration

for the conference is still open – have you registered yet?


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