Publication | Open Access
Passive os fingerprinting methods in the jungle of wireless networks
40
Citations
12
References
2018
Year
Unknown Venue
Mobile SecurityEngineeringInformation SecurityWireless LanPassive OsWireless ComputingWireless SecurityInternet Of ThingsNetwork SecurityNetwork Traffic EvolutionComputer EngineeringData PrivacyMobile ComputingComputer ScienceSignal ProcessingNetwork ForensicsData SecurityCryptographyOs FingerprintingOperating SystemsEdge ComputingNetwork Traffic MeasurementWireless Network Management
Operating system fingerprinting methods are well- known in the domain of static networks and managed environments. Yet few studies tackled this challenge in real networks, where users can bring and connect any device. We evaluate the performance of three OS fingerprinting methods on a large dataset collected from university wireless network. Our results show that method based on HTTP User-agents is the most accurate but can identify only low portion of the traffic. TCP/IP parameters method proved to be the opposite with high coverage but low accuracy. We also implemented a new method based on detection of communication to OS-specific domains. Its performance is comparable to the two established ones. Next, we discuss the impacts of traffic encryption and embracing new protocols such as IPv6 or HTTP/2.0 on OS fingerprinting. Our findings suggest that OS identification based on specific domain detection is viable and corresponds to the current directions of network traffic evolution, while methods based on TCP/IP parameters and User-agents will become ineffective in the future.
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