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WINSTON-SALEM, NC Sept. 25, 2009 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In the
never-ending battle to
protect computer networks from intruders,
security experts are deploying a new defense modeled after one of
nature's hardiest creatures -- the ant.
Unlike
traditional security devices, which are static, these "digital ants"
wander through computer networks looking for threats, such as "computer
worms" -- self-replicating programs designed to steal information or
facilitate unauthorized use of machines. When a digital ant detects a
threat, it doesn't take long for an army of ants to converge at that
location, drawing the attention of human operators who step in to
investigate.
The concept, called "swarm intelligence," promises to transform cyber security because it adapts readily to changing threats.
"In
nature, we know that ants defend against threats very successfully,"
explains Wake Forest Professor of Computer Science Errin Fulp, an
expert in security and computer networks. "They can ramp up their
defense rapidly, and then resume routine behavior quickly after an
intruder has been stopped. We were trying to achieve that same
framework in a computer system."
Current
security devices are designed to defend against all known threats at
all times, but the bad guys who write malware -- software created for
malicious purposes -- keep introducing slight variations to evade
computer defenses.
As new
variations are discovered and updates issued, security programs gobble
more resources, antivirus scans take longer and machines run slower --
a familiar problem for most computer users.
Glenn
Fink, a research scientist at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
(PNNL) in Richland, Washington, came up with the idea of copying ant
behavior. PNNL, one of 10 Department of Energy laboratories, conducts
cutting-edge research in cyber security.
Fink
was familiar with Fulp's expertise developing faster scans using
parallel processing -- dividing computer data into batches like lines
of shoppers going through grocery store checkouts, where each lane is
focused on certain threats. He invited Fulp and Wake Forest graduate
students Wes Featherstun and Brian Williams to join a project there
this summer that tested digital ants on a network of 64 computers.
Swarm intelligence, the approach developed by PNNL and Wake Forest, divides up the process of searching for specific threats.
"Our
idea is to deploy 3,000 different types of digital ants, each looking
for evidence of a threat," Fulp says. "As they move about the network,
they leave digital trails modeled after the scent trails ants in nature
use to guide other ants. Each time a digital ant identifies some
evidence, it is programmed to leave behind a stronger scent. Stronger
scent trails attract more ants, producing the swarm that marks a
potential computer infection."
In
the study this summer, Fulp introduced a worm into the network, and the
digital ants successfully found it. PNNL has extended the project this
semester, and Featherstun and Williams plan to incorporate the research
into their master's theses.
Fulp
says the new security approach is best suited for large networks that
share many identical machines, such as those found in governments,
large corporations and universities.
Computer
users need not worry that a swarm of digital ants will decide to take
up residence in their machine by mistake. Digital ants cannot survive
without software "sentinels" located at each machine, which in turn
report to network "sergeants" monitored by humans, who supervise the
colony and maintain ultimate control.
Information Source: PRNewswire-USNewswire
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