English

A Network Protection Framework through Artificial Immunity

Multiagent Systems 2008-05-14 v1 Cryptography and Security

Abstract

Current network protection systems use a collection of intelligent components - e.g. classifiers or rule-based firewall systems to detect intrusions and anomalies and to secure a network against viruses, worms, or trojans. However, these network systems rely on individuality and support an architecture with less collaborative work of the protection components. They give less administration support for maintenance, but offer a large number of individual single points of failures - an ideal situation for network attacks to succeed. In this work, we discuss the required features, the performance, and the problems of a distributed protection system called {\it SANA}. It consists of a cooperative architecture, it is motivated by the human immune system, where the components correspond to artificial immune cells that are connected for their collaborative work. SANA promises a better protection against intruders than common known protection systems through an adaptive self-management while keeping the resources efficiently by an intelligent reduction of redundancies. We introduce a library of several novel and common used protection components and evaluate the performance of SANA by a proof-of-concept implementation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0805.1787,
  title  = {A Network Protection Framework through Artificial Immunity},
  author = {Michael Hilker and Christoph Schommer},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0805.1787},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

24 pages, 2 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:39:47.716Z