Simone Cossaro (University of Trieste), Damiano Ravalico (University of Trieste), Rodolfo Vieira Valentim (University of Turin), Martino Trevisan (University of Trieste), Idilio Drago (University of Turin)

Network telescopes (IP addresses hosting no services) are valuable for observing unsolicited Internet traffic from scanners, crawlers, botnets, and misconfigured hosts. This traffic is known as Internet radiation, and its monitoring with telescopes helps in identifying malicious activities. Yet, the deployment of telescopes is expensive. Meanwhile, numerous public blocklists aggregate data from various sources to track IP addresses involved in malicious activity. This raises the question of whether public blocklists already provide sufficient coverage of these actors, thus rendering new network telescopes unnecessary. We address this question by analyzing traffic from four geographically distributed telescopes and dozens of public blocklists over a two-month period. Our findings show that public blocklists include approximately 71% of IP addresses observed in the telescopes. Moreover, telescopes typically observe scanning activities days before they appear in blocklists. We also find that only 4 out of 50 lists contribute the majority of the coverage, while the addresses evading blocklists present more sporadic activity. Our results demonstrate that distributed telescopes remain valuable assets for network security, providing early detection of threats and complementary coverage to public blocklists. These results call for more coordination among telescope operators and blocklist providers to enhance the defense against emerging threats.

View More Papers

EAGLEYE: Exposing Hidden Web Interfaces in IoT Devices via...

Hangtian Liu (Information Engineering University), Lei Zheng (Institute for Network Sciences and Cyberspace (INSC), Tsinghua University), Shuitao Gan (Laboratory for Advanced Computing and Intelligence Engineering), Chao Zhang (Institute for Network Sciences and Cyberspace (INSC), Tsinghua University), Zicong Gao (Information Engineering University), Hongqi Zhang (Henan Key Laboratory of Information Security), Yishun Zeng (Institute for Network Sciences…

Read More

RadSee: See Your Handwriting Through Walls Using FMCW Radar

Shichen Zhang (Michigan State University), Qijun Wang (Michigan State University), Maolin Gan (Michigan State University), Zhichao Cao (Michigan State University), Huacheng Zeng (Michigan State University)

Read More

Dissecting Payload-based Transaction Phishing on Ethereum

Zhuo Chen (Zhejiang University), Yufeng Hu (Zhejiang University), Bowen He (Zhejiang University), Dong Luo (Zhejiang University), Lei Wu (Zhejiang University), Yajin Zhou (Zhejiang University)

Read More

Off-Path TCP Hijacking in Wi-Fi Networks: A Packet-Size Side...

Ziqiang Wang (Southeast University), Xuewei Feng (Tsinghua University), Qi Li (Tsinghua University), Kun Sun (George Mason University), Yuxiang Yang (Tsinghua University), Mengyuan Li (University of Toronto), Ganqiu Du (China Software Testing Center), Ke Xu (Tsinghua University), Jianping Wu (Tsinghua University)

Read More