@inproceedings{scanlon2016behavioral, author={Bou-Harb, Elias and Scanlon, Mark and Fachkha, Claude}, title="{Behavioral Service Graphs: A Big Data Approach for Prompt Investigation of Internet-wide Infections}", booktitle="{Proceedings of the IFIP International Workshop on Cybercrime Investigation and Digital Forensics (CID)}", year="2016", month="11", address={Larnaca Bay, Cyprus}, publisher={IEEE}, pages="1-5", abstract="The task of generating network-based evidence to support network forensic investigation is becoming increasingly prominent. Undoubtedly, such evidence is significantly imperative as it not only can be used to diagnose and respond to various network-related issues (i.e., performance bottlenecks, routing issues, etc.) but more importantly, can be leveraged to infer and further investigate network security intrusions and infections. In this context, this paper proposes a proactive approach that aims at generating accurate and actionable network-based evidence related to groups of compromised network machines. The approach is envisioned to guide investigators to promptly pinpoint such malicious groups for possible immediate mitigation as well as empowering network and digital forensic specialists to further examine those machines using auxiliary collected data or extracted digital artifacts. On one hand, the promptness of the approach is successfully achieved by monitoring and correlating perceived probing activities, which are typically the very first signs of an infection or misdemeanors. On the other hand, the generated evidence is accurate as it is based on an anomaly inference that fuzes big data behavioral analytics in conjunction with formal graph theoretical concepts. We evaluate the proposed approach as a global capability in a security operations center. The empirical evaluations which employ 80 GB of real darknet traffic indeed demonstrates the accuracy, effectiveness and simplicity of the generated network-based evidence." }