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Abstract
As machine learning (ML) classifiers increasingly oversee the automated
monitoring of network traffic, studying their resilience against adversarial
attacks becomes critical. This paper focuses on poisoning attacks, specifically
backdoor attacks, against network traffic flow classifiers. We investigate the
challenging scenario of clean-label poisoning where the adversary's
capabilities are constrained to tampering only with the training data - without
the ability to arbitrarily modify the training labels or any other component of
the training process. We describe a trigger crafting strategy that leverages
model interpretability techniques to generate trigger patterns that are
effective even at very low poisoning rates. Finally, we design novel strategies
to generate stealthy triggers, including an approach based on generative
Bayesian network models, with the goal of minimizing the conspicuousness of the
trigger, and thus making detection of an ongoing poisoning campaign more
challenging. Our findings provide significant insights into the feasibility of
poisoning attacks on network traffic classifiers used in multiple scenarios,
including detecting malicious communication and application classification.