HoneyMesh: Preventing Distributed Denial of Service Attacks using Virtualized Honeypots
Hrishikesh Arun Deshpande

TL;DR
This paper proposes HoneyMesh, a system using virtualized honeypots to detect and prevent distributed denial of service attacks, thereby enhancing the continuous availability of web services.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mesh of virtualized honeypots specifically designed to prevent DDoS attacks, improving upon existing honeypot solutions.
Findings
Effective detection of DDoS attack patterns
Prevention of service disruption through honeypot interaction
Enhanced availability of web services
Abstract
Today, internet and web services have become an inseparable part of our lives. Hence, ensuring continuous availability of service has become imperative to the success of any organization. But these services are often hampered by constant threats from myriad types of attacks. One such attack is called distributed denial of service attack that results in issues ranging from temporary slowdown of servers to complete non-availability of service. Honeypot, which is a sort of a trap, can be used to interact with potential attackers to deflect, detect or prevent such attacks and ensure continuous availability of service. This paper gives insights into the problems posed by distributed denial of service attacks, existing solutions that use honeypots and how a mesh of virtualized honeypots can be used to prevent distributed denial of service attacks.
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