Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on the Internet of Things 2021
DOI: 10.1145/3494322.3494340
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NURSE: eNd-UseR IoT malware detection tool for Smart homEs

Abstract: IoT devices keep entering our homes with the promise of delivering more services and enhancing user experience; however, these new devices also carry along an alarming number of vulnerabilities and security issues. In most cases, the users of these devices are completely unaware of the security risks that connecting these devices entail. Current tools do not provide users with essential security information such as whether a device is infected with malware. Traditional techniques to detect malware infections w… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…With the proliferation of IoT devices, now attackers are shifting to IoT persistent malware [6,9,59,63] since these devices have several advantages for attackers, like low computational capacity [36], thus they cannot count on protections such as antivirus which Windows systems do. The current state of the art has also learned about Mirai, a non-persistent IoT malware, that can be removed by rebooting the device and changing passwords [3,7,14,27,54], however, in this research we dealt with QSnatch, a malware, that needs convoluted steps from users to be remediated, and does not count on the same mechanisms for removal from Windows malware or Mirai.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the proliferation of IoT devices, now attackers are shifting to IoT persistent malware [6,9,59,63] since these devices have several advantages for attackers, like low computational capacity [36], thus they cannot count on protections such as antivirus which Windows systems do. The current state of the art has also learned about Mirai, a non-persistent IoT malware, that can be removed by rebooting the device and changing passwords [3,7,14,27,54], however, in this research we dealt with QSnatch, a malware, that needs convoluted steps from users to be remediated, and does not count on the same mechanisms for removal from Windows malware or Mirai.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the proliferation of IoT devices, now attackers are shifting to IoT persistent malware [8]- [11] since these devices have several advantages for attackers, like low computational capacity [48], thus they cannot count on protections such as antivirus which Windows systems do. The current state of the art has also learned about Mirai, a non-persistent IoT malware, that can be removed by rebooting the device and changing passwords [1], [6], [7], [24], [49], however, in this research we dealt with QSnatch, a malware, that needs convoluted steps from users to be remediated, and does not count on the same mechanisms for removal from Windows malware or Mirai.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%