Abstract-In the Internet age, every computer user is likely to inadvertently encounter highly contagious viruses. Over the past several years, a new type of web attack has spread across the web, that is, when a client connects to a malicious remote server, the server responds to the request while simultaneously transporting malicious programs to the client's computer, thereby launching a drive-by download attack. If the attack is successful, malicious servers can control and execute any program from the client's computer. Malicious websites frequently harbor obfuscation mechanisms to evade signaturebased detection systems. These obfuscators have become increasingly sophisticated that they have begun to invade multimedia files (JPG, Flash, and PDF). Under such circumstances, unless specific behaviors are triggered by malicious webpages, identifying programs with malicious intent by merely analyzing web content is extremely difficult, not to mention the formidable quantity of webpages and the ever changing attack techniques. Based on a client-side honeypot system, this study proposes a model for determining whether a webpage is malicious. We present a technique to improve the accuracy of malicious web detection. First, static content analysis is performed to accelerate the detection, followed by actual browsing on webpages for in-depth probing using the client-side honeypot system. Using this method, user's security is protected when surfing the Internet.
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