Challenge 10 - Attack Visualization (provided by Ben Reardon from Australia Chapter)
Please submit your solution by January 22th 2012 at http://www.honeynet.org/challenge2010.
Results will be announced on 2012, February 29th. For any questions and inquiries, please contact forensicchallenge2010@honeynet.org.
Skill Level: Intermediate
Forensic Challenge 10 takes us back in time, to revisit one of last year’s popular Forensic Challenges (FC5). Although this time around, the goal is to create a visual representation of the attack.
There are no right or wrong answers here, and we are keen to see what can create! If you are constrained by any guidelines, or have ideas that are “out of the box” – that’s fine, we want you to use your imagination and have fun.
The Challenge:
Design and build a visualization that describes the attacks that were analyzed in FC5. Use the three prize winners’ solutions as references and to give you a head start on the data analysis. Use the FC5 dataset to create your FC10 visualization.
As an example, the visualization may have a geographic element, represented as a map, link graphs, histogram, or parallel coordinates, that sheds light on the following:
Use external data sources such as the many freely available geomapping databases.
The output can be anything that you like - from a still image, to interactive flash/java, dynamically updating, dashboard style, magazine infographic, holograms are also accepted.
Judging:
Because data visualization is a very subjective topic, we will have a panel of 3 Honeynet members to judge entries. These panel members have an active interest in the data visualization field in the Honeynet Project. Keep in mind though, the nature of this challenge is not really to find a “winner”, but rather to inspire newcomers into the data visualization field within cybersecurity. If you know anyone who is not in security field , but may enjoy being part of this challenge, please forward this to them – we’d love to get some submissions from people outside the security field.
Points:
The minimum question set that the visualization should address is:
Bonus points:
Sources of info:
Hint: take some time and look around for inspiration in data visualization of fields outside of cyber security. Consider how you might apply some of the same concepts and ideas to this dataset.
http://flowingdata.com
http://infosthetics.com
http://datavisualization.ch
http://www.secviz.org
http://www.maxmind.com
http://www.vizsec.org
And of course our recent Google Summer of Code projects:
The Winners
1. Fabian Fischer
2. Chris Horsley
3. Fraser Scott
4. Dan Gleebits
5. Johnathan Tracz
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Fabian_Fischer_-_Forensic_Challenge_2011_-_Challenge_10.pdf | 7.64 MB |
| 1323732877_Forensic_Report_Johnathon_Tracz.zip | 925.16 KB |
| 1323998682_fc10HoneynetChallengeSubmissionDanGleebits.pdf | 4.47 MB |
| 1327193551_logvis_Fraser_Scott.zip | 736.21 KB |
| 1327239365_hn_vis_chorsley.zip | 110.89 KB |