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On the Origin of Scanning

Gerry Wan, Liz Izhikevich, David Adrian, Katsunari Yoshioka, Ralph Holz, Christian Rossow, Zakir Durumeric

202053 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fast IPv4 scanning has enabled researchers to answer a wealth of security and networking questions. Yet, despite widespread use, there has been little validation of the methodology's accuracy, including whether a single scan provides sufficient coverage. In this paper, we analyze how scan origin affects the results of Internet-wide scans by completing three HTTP, HTTPS, and SSH scans from seven geographically and topologically diverse networks. We find that individual origins miss an average 1.6-8.4% of HTTP, 1.5-4.6% of HTTPS, and 8.3-18.2% of SSH hosts. We analyze why origins see different hosts, and show how permanent and temporary blocking, packet loss, geographic biases, and transient outages affect scan results. We discuss the implications for scanning and provide recommendations for future studies.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceThe InternetNetwork packetIPv4Transient (computer programming)Affect (linguistics)Blocking (statistics)Computer securityWorld Wide WebComputer networkIPv6PsychologyOperating systemCommunicationInternet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-votingNetwork Security and Intrusion DetectionIPv6, Mobility, Handover, Networks, Security
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