The rise of emerging cyberthreats has led to a shift of focus on identifying the source of threat instead of the type of attack to provide a more effective defense to compromised environments against malicious acts. The most complex type of cyberthreat is the Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) attack that is usually backed by one or more states and lunched using a range of clandestine techniques aiming at high-value targets. Finding the source of the attackers and the associated campaign behind the threats can lead to taking an optimum defense decision in a more timely fashion. Threat attribution is an act of attributing an attack to the source of the attack. Threat attribution can not be fully achieved by a single piece of evidence (i.e. single view) from malicious actors as the evidence could get obfuscated by the actor to evade the detection mechanism. In this paper, we propose a multi-view fuzzy consensus clustering model for attributing cyber threat payloads (malware) to its actor. We conduct over 4000 experiments to find out the best combinations of all 12 extracted views for the attribution task. Our experiments use five well-know APT families payloads. To avoid bias in the results, we apply a fuzzy pattern tree and multi-modal fuzzy classifier for our inference engines of all views. To define an optimum distinction among the malicious actor's behavior we implemented the consensus clustering technique. The comparison analysis of a singleview versus multi-view result justifies a significant improvement in the accuracy rate of attribution for all actors. The obtained results from the multi-view aspect of our proposed model give 95.2% accuracy.
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