@article {18686, title = {Prioritizing Vulnerability Remediation by Determining Attacker-Targeted Vulnerabilities}, journal = {Security Privacy, IEEE}, volume = {7}, year = {2009}, month = {2009/02//jan}, pages = {42 - 48}, abstract = {This article attempts to empirically analyze which vulnerabilities attackers tend to target in order to prioritize vulnerability remediation. This analysis focuses on the link between malicious connections and vulnerabilities, where each connection is considered malicious. Attacks requiring multiple connections are counted as multiple attacks. As the number of connections increases, so does the cost of recovering from the intrusion. The authors deployed four honey pots for four months, each running a different Windows service pack with its associated set of vulnerabilities. They then performed three empirical analyses to determine the relationship between the number of malicious connections and the total number of vulnerabilities, the number of malicious connections and the number of the vulnerabilities for different services, and the number of known successful attacks and the number of vulnerabilities for different services.}, keywords = {attacker-targeted vulnerabilities, intrusion detection, malicious connections, security of data, vulnerability remediation, Windows service pack}, isbn = {1540-7993}, doi = {10.1109/MSP.2009.13}, author = {Michel Cukier and Panjwani,S.} }