BorderPatrol: Securing BYOD using fine-grained contextual information
Speaker/Bio
Onur Zungur is a 4th year
PhD student advised by Prof. Manuel Egele. His current research focus is on security enforcement on mobile devices.
Abstract
Companies adopt Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)
policies extensively, for both convenience and cost management.
The compelling way of putting private and business related
applications (apps) on the same device leads to the widespread
usage of employee owned devices to access sensitive company
data and services. Such practices create a security risk as a
legitimate app may send business-sensitive data to third party
servers through detrimental app functions or packaged libraries.
In this paper, we propose BORDERPATROL, a system for
extracting contextual data that businesses can leverage to enforce
access control in BYOD-enabled corporate networks through
fine-grained policies. BORDERPATROL extracts contextual information, which is the stack trace of the app function that generated
the network traffic, on provisioned user devices and transfers this
data in IP headers to enforce desired policies at network routers.
BORDERPATROL provides a way to selectively prevent undesired
functionalities, such as analytics activities or advertisements, and
help enforce information dissemination policies of the company
while leaving other functions of the app intact. Using 2,000 apps,
we demonstrate that BORDERPATROL is effective in preventing
packets which originate from previously identified analytics and
advertisement libraries from leaving the network premises. In
addition, we show BORDERPATROL’s capability in selectively
preventing undesirable app functions using case studies.
Ref
O. Zungur, G. Suarez-Tangil, G. Stringhini, M. Egele "BorderPatrol: Securing BYOD using fine-grained contextual information", (to be presented at DSN 2019,)