English

Simulating Cyber-Attacks for Fun and Profit

Cryptography and Security 2010-06-11 v1

Abstract

We introduce a new simulation platform called Insight, created to design and simulate cyber-attacks against large arbitrary target scenarios. Insight has surprisingly low hardware and configuration requirements, while making the simulation a realistic experience from the attacker's standpoint. The scenarios include a crowd of simulated actors: network devices, hardware devices, software applications, protocols, users, etc. A novel characteristic of this tool is to simulate vulnerabilities (including 0-days) and exploits, allowing an attacker to compromise machines and use them as pivoting stones to continue the attack. A user can test and modify complex scenarios, with several interconnected networks, where the attacker has no initial connectivity with the objective of the attack. We give a concise description of this new technology, and its possible uses in the security research field, such as pentesting training, study of the impact of 0-days vulnerabilities, evaluation of security countermeasures, and risk assessment tool.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1006.1919,
  title  = {Simulating Cyber-Attacks for Fun and Profit},
  author = {Ariel Futoransky and Fernando Miranda and Jose Orlicki and Carlos Sarraute},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1006.1919},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

10 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T15:34:12.215Z