In this paper, we consider the problem of malware detection and classification based on image analysis. We convert executable files to images and apply image recognition using deep learning (DL) models. To train these models, we employ transfer learning based on existing DL models that have been pre-trained on massive image datasets. We carry out various experiments with this technique and compare its performance to that of an extremely simple machine learning technique, namely, k-nearest neighbors (k-NN). For our k-NN experiments, we use features extracted directly from executables, rather than image analysis. While our image-based DL technique performs well in the experiments, surprisingly, it is outperformed by k-NN. We show that DL models are better able to generalize the data, in the sense that they outperform k-NN in simulated zero-day experiments.
Email is one of the most common forms of digital communication. Spam is unsolicited bulk email, while image spam consists of spam text embedded inside an image. Image spam is used as a means to evade textbased spam filters, and hence image spam poses a threat to email-based communication. In this research, we analyze image spam detection using support vector machines (SVMs), which we train on a wide variety of image features. We use a linear SVM to quantify the relative importance of the features under consideration. We also develop and analyze a realistic "challenge" dataset that illustrates the limitations of current image spam detection techniques. 2 BACKGROUND In this section, we briefly consider spam detection techniques. Then we discuss research that is most clo
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