Ruhr-Uni-Bochum

Less is More: A privacy-respecting Android malware classifier using Federated Learning

2021

Conference / Journal

Authors

Claudia Diaz Rafa Gálvez Veelasha Moonsamy

Research Hub

Research Hub C: Sichere Systeme
Research Hub D: Benutzerfreundlichkeit

Research Challenges

RC 8: Security with Untrusted Components
RC 9: Intelligent Security Systems
RC 11: End-users and Usability

Abstract

In this paper we present LiM ("Less is More"), a malware classification framework that leverages Federated Learning to detect and classify malicious apps in a privacy-respecting manner. Information about newly installed apps is kept locally on users' devices, so that the provider cannot infer which apps were installed by users. At the same time, input from all users is taken into account in the federated learning process and they all benefit from better classification performance. A key challenge of this setting is that users do not have access to the ground truth (i.e. they cannot correctly identify whether an app is malicious). To tackle this, LiM uses a safe semi-supervised ensemble that maximizes classification accuracy with respect to a baseline classifier trained by the service provider (i.e. the cloud). We implement LiM and show that the cloud server has F1 score of 95%, while clients have perfect recall with only 1 false positive in >100 apps, using a dataset of 25K clean apps and 25K malicious apps, 200 users and 50 rounds of federation. Furthermore, we conduct a security analysis and demonstrate that LiM is robust against both poisoning attacks by adversaries who control half of the clients, and inference attacks performed by an honest-but-curious cloud server. Further experiments with MaMaDroid's dataset confirm resistance against poisoning attacks and a performance improvement due to the federation.

Tags

Mobile Security
Machine Learning
Malware
Behavior