Advanced Deception Technology Through Behavioral Biometrics

DerbyCon 8.0 - Evolution

Presented by: Curt Barnard, Dawud Gordon
Date: Sunday October 07, 2018
Time: 09:30 - 09:55
Location: Kentucky C & D
Track: Stable

In cybersecurity, the attacker tends to have a significant advantage over the defender. A motivated network defender should look for opportunities to have an asymmetric advantage over the attacker to level the playing field. In this talk, we will apply the concept of Behavioral Biometrics in the realm of deception technologies to obtain such an advantage. There are three common factors used in authentication: something you know (a password), something you have (a token), and something you are (a biometric). Each factor has its own unique strengths and weaknesses. In the case of biometrics, biometric data is, in many cases, easy to steal and spoof. Once biometric data is stolen, it is impossible to change, since it is inherently tied to the user. Behavioral Biometrics is the authentication paradigm of using an individual’s behavior as a biometric, rather than a fingerprint. The technology looks at how how a user interacts with a system, such as how they type or move the mouse, touch the screen, which hand they hold the device in, the characteristics of their gait from the motion sensor, as well as spatial and temporal patterns. The result is a biometric that is not immediately visible to an attacker, and incredibly difficult to spoof. Traditionally, should behavioral components detect an intrusion, access is blocked, authentication escalated, or the user was de-authed completely. However, this does not necessarily have to be the case. Deception technology has emerged as a method to either delay attackers, coax out their TTPs (Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures), or gather clues about their true identities. This strategy typically includes things such as canaries, honeypots, or tainted or tracked data. The challenge with deception technology is often in identifying an attacker in the first place in order to divert them to fake resources. We will demonstrate in this talk that Behavioral Biometrics are uniquely positioned to identify an attacker as unauthorized, independent of credentials, in a way that is invisible and spoof resistant. With that information, deceptive technology can redirect their attack in order to delay it, discover the attackers TTPs, or even learn the identity of the attacker as they attempt to exfiltrate mocked data, transfer funds, or use services. We will conclude by demonstrating this combination live.

Curt Barnard

Curt is the Founder and CEO of ThreshingFloor (threshingfloor.io). Curt holds an MS in Cyber Operations from the Air Force Institute of Technology, and has spent the last decade in cybersecurity across public and private industries, including venture capital. Curt’s research interests lie primarily in network analysis, anonymizing technologies, and generally breaking stuff.

Dawud Gordon

Dr. Dawud Gordon is CEO & Co-Founder at TWOSENSE.AI, an NYC-based Behavioral Biometrics firm that makes authentication invisible through AI. Dawud holds a Ph.D. in Computer Engineering from KIT in Karlsruhe, Germany for his work on using Machine Learning to for human behavior analytics. He has published over 30 peer-reviewed papers and patents on related topics, and won several awards for his research.


KhanFu - Mobile schedules for INFOSEC conferences.
Mobile interface | Alternate Formats