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Zero Botnets: An Observe-Pursue-Counter Approach

16 January 2022
J. Kepner
Jonathan Bernays
Stephen Buckley
Kenjiro Cho
Cary Conrad
L. Daigle
Keeley Erhardt
V. Gadepally
Barry Greene
Michael Jones
Rob Knake
B. Maggs
Peter Michaleas
C. Meiners
Andrew Morris
Alex Pentland
Sandeep Pisharody
Sarah Powazek
Andrew Prout
Philip J. Reiner
Koichi Suzuki
Kenji Takahashi
Tony Tauber
L. Walker
Douglas Stetson
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Abstract

Adversarial Internet robots (botnets) represent a growing threat to the safe use and stability of the Internet. Botnets can play a role in launching adversary reconnaissance (scanning and phishing), influence operations (upvoting), and financing operations (ransomware, market manipulation, denial of service, spamming, and ad click fraud) while obfuscating tailored tactical operations. Reducing the presence of botnets on the Internet, with the aspirational target of zero, is a powerful vision for galvanizing policy action. Setting a global goal, encouraging international cooperation, creating incentives for improving networks, and supporting entities for botnet takedowns are among several policies that could advance this goal. These policies raise significant questions regarding proper authorities/access that cannot be answered in the abstract. Systems analysis has been widely used in other domains to achieve sufficient detail to enable these questions to be dealt with in concrete terms. Defeating botnets using an observe-pursue-counter architecture is analyzed, the technical feasibility is affirmed, and the authorities/access questions are significantly narrowed. Recommended next steps include: supporting the international botnet takedown community, expanding network observatories, enhancing the underlying network science at scale, conducting detailed systems analysis, and developing appropriate policy frameworks.

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