LIVERMORE, Calif. (KGO) -- Scientists at Lawrence Livermore Lab are taking a new approach to security over the Internet: using their huge supercomputers to analyze computer behavior for suspicious activity.
A firewall protects a computer by filtering out suspicious content.
"So the state of the art," says Celeste Matarazzo. "Would be 'I know this computer with this name is bad. It's doing bad things. So I'll block that.'"
Likewise, anti-virus software searches a computer for suspicious content. Now researchers at Lawrence Livermore Lab have devised a new way. Instead of monitoring content, they monitor behavior. If a computer starts to behave suspiciously, they pull its plug to the network.
The heart of the technology is an agent on every desktop -- a tiny, almost invisible app that takes up almost no memory and acts as a digital psychiatrist. It uses techniques developed by Matarazzo and fellow scientists, on a Livermore supercomputer, to do something impossible a few years ago: build a software model of the activity of all the Lab's 40,000 unclassified computers.
Here's an example of how it works. They know that computers in the travel department talk to airlines, they talk to employees, they talk to finance, "But," Matarazzo interjects, "they don't talk to the supercomputers. So, if we start seeing the computers in the travel department start communicating with the supercomputers in this room, we would say, 'that's unusual.'"
The same supercomputers simulate nuclear weapons for defense. They simulate weather. For cyber security, the next step is to simulate the Internet.
"I think it may need supercomputing to do that. So, I think we have to start somewhere, and I think we can at least do simple operations modeling the Internet," said Matarazzo.
If unusual behavior is detected, nobody can pull the plug on the web, but this will make it possible to detect suspicious behavior that doesn't show up on anyone's radar yet. The lab is sharing its app with the private sector for use by the public.
lawrence livermore lab, drive to discover
- Four injured from six-alarm fire in Redwood City 10 min ago
- Alcatraz Island will open Thursday
- City College of SF picks a new chancellor
- Signs indicate rebound in Bay Area hiring
- BART Strike Threat: Transit Resources
- Obama signs measure averting default on debt
- Millions to take part in global earthquake drill
- Yosemite reopens following government shutdown
- Community rallies to help toddler with brain tumor
- Children's hospital nurses make music video...
- Samsung breaks ground on new campus in Mt. View
- abcnews: House stenographer yanked from chamber for...
- roundup: Emergency landing; Free SATs
- weather: Bay Area weather forecast for Thursday
1.
- Bay Area weather forecast for Thursday
31 min ago
-
Most Popular
-
Most Viewed StoriesMost Viewed Photos
- abc7news.com home
- Site Map
- RSS
- Advertise with Us
- Contact Us
- Online Public Inspection File
- Technical Help
- ABC.com
- ABCNews.com
- Privacy Policy
- Interest-Based Ads
- Safety Information for this site
- Terms of Use
- Copyright ©2013 ABC Inc., KGO-TV San Francisco, CA. All Rights Reserved.




