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2011 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy
Click Trajectories: End-to-End Analysis of the Spam Value Chain
Oakland, California USA
May 22-May 25
ISBN: 978-0-7695-4402-1
| ASCII Text | x | ||
| Kirill Levchenko, Andreas Pitsillidis, Neha Chachra, Brandon Enright, M´rk Félegyh´zi, Chris Grier, Tristan Halvorson, Chris Kanich, Christian Kreibich, He Liu, Damon McCoy, Nicholas Weaver, Vern Paxson, Geoffrey M. Voelker, Stefan Savage, "Click Trajectories: End-to-End Analysis of the Spam Value Chain," Security and Privacy, IEEE Symposium on, pp. 431-446, 2011 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, 2011. | |||
| BibTex | x | ||
| @article{ 10.1109/SP.2011.24, author = {Kirill Levchenko and Andreas Pitsillidis and Neha Chachra and Brandon Enright and M´rk Félegyh´zi and Chris Grier and Tristan Halvorson and Chris Kanich and Christian Kreibich and He Liu and Damon McCoy and Nicholas Weaver and Vern Paxson and Geoffrey M. Voelker and Stefan Savage}, title = {Click Trajectories: End-to-End Analysis of the Spam Value Chain}, journal ={Security and Privacy, IEEE Symposium on}, volume = {0}, year = {2011}, issn = {1081-6011}, pages = {431-446}, doi = {http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/SP.2011.24}, publisher = {IEEE Computer Society}, address = {Los Alamitos, CA, USA}, } | |||
| RefWorks Procite/RefMan/Endnote | x | ||
| TY - CONF JO - Security and Privacy, IEEE Symposium on TI - Click Trajectories: End-to-End Analysis of the Spam Value Chain SN - 1081-6011 SP431 EP446 A1 - Kirill Levchenko, A1 - Andreas Pitsillidis, A1 - Neha Chachra, A1 - Brandon Enright, A1 - M´rk Félegyh´zi, A1 - Chris Grier, A1 - Tristan Halvorson, A1 - Chris Kanich, A1 - Christian Kreibich, A1 - He Liu, A1 - Damon McCoy, A1 - Nicholas Weaver, A1 - Vern Paxson, A1 - Geoffrey M. Voelker, A1 - Stefan Savage, PY - 2011 VL - 0 JA - Security and Privacy, IEEE Symposium on ER - | |||
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/SP.2011.24
Spam-based advertising is a business. While it has engendered both widespread antipathy and a multi-billion dollar anti-spam industry, it continues to exist because it fuels a profitable enterprise. We lack, however, a solid understanding of this enterprise's full structure, and thus most anti-Spam interventions focus on only one facet of the overall spam value chain (e.g., spam filtering, URL blacklisting, site takedown).In this paper we present a holistic analysis that quantifies the full set of resources employed to monetize spam email -- including naming, hosting, payment and fulfillment -- usingextensive measurements of three months of diverse spam data, broad crawling of naming and hosting infrastructures, and over 100 purchases from spam-advertised sites. We relate these resources to the organizations who administer them and then use this data to characterize the relative prospects for defensive interventions at each link in the spam value chain. In particular, we provide the first strong evidence of payment bottlenecks in the spam value chain, 95% of spam-advertised pharmaceutical, replica and software products are monetized using merchant services from just a handful of banks.
Citation:
Kirill Levchenko, Andreas Pitsillidis, Neha Chachra, Brandon Enright, M´rk Félegyh´zi, Chris Grier, Tristan Halvorson, Chris Kanich, Christian Kreibich, He Liu, Damon McCoy, Nicholas Weaver, Vern Paxson, Geoffrey M. Voelker, Stefan Savage, "Click Trajectories: End-to-End Analysis of the Spam Value Chain," sp, pp.431-446, 2011 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, 2011
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