From cybersec-toolkit
Evaluates attribution evidence for cyber campaigns using Diamond Model, ACH, infrastructure overlaps, TTP consistency, malware similarities, and operational patterns to identify threat actors.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/cybersec-toolkit:analyzing-campaign-attribution-evidenceThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Campaign attribution analysis involves systematically evaluating evidence to determine which threat actor or group is responsible for a cyber operation. This skill covers collecting and weighting attribution indicators using the Diamond Model and ACH (Analysis of Competing Hypotheses), analyzing infrastructure overlaps, TTP consistency, malware code similarities, operational timing patterns, an...
Campaign attribution analysis involves systematically evaluating evidence to determine which threat actor or group is responsible for a cyber operation. This skill covers collecting and weighting attribution indicators using the Diamond Model and ACH (Analysis of Competing Hypotheses), analyzing infrastructure overlaps, TTP consistency, malware code similarities, operational timing patterns, and language artifacts to build confidence-weighted attribution assessments.
attackcti, stix2, networkx librariesStructured analytical method that evaluates evidence against multiple competing hypotheses. Each piece of evidence is scored as consistent, inconsistent, or neutral with respect to each hypothesis. The hypothesis with the least inconsistent evidence is favored.
from stix2 import MemoryStore, Filter
from collections import defaultdict
class AttributionAnalyzer:
def __init__(self):
self.evidence = []
self.hypotheses = {}
def add_evidence(self, category, description, value, confidence):
self.evidence.append({
"category": category,
"description": description,
"value": value,
"confidence": confidence,
"timestamp": None,
})
def add_hypothesis(self, actor_name, actor_id=""):
self.hypotheses[actor_name] = {
"actor_id": actor_id,
"consistent_evidence": [],
"inconsistent_evidence": [],
"neutral_evidence": [],
"score": 0,
}
def evaluate_evidence(self, evidence_idx, actor_name, assessment):
"""Assess evidence against a hypothesis: consistent/inconsistent/neutral."""
if assessment == "consistent":
self.hypotheses[actor_name]["consistent_evidence"].append(evidence_idx)
self.hypotheses[actor_name]["score"] += self.evidence[evidence_idx]["confidence"]
elif assessment == "inconsistent":
self.hypotheses[actor_name]["inconsistent_evidence"].append(evidence_idx)
self.hypotheses[actor_name]["score"] -= self.evidence[evidence_idx]["confidence"] * 2
else:
self.hypotheses[actor_name]["neutral_evidence"].append(evidence_idx)
def rank_hypotheses(self):
"""Rank hypotheses by attribution score."""
ranked = sorted(
self.hypotheses.items(),
key=lambda x: x[1]["score"],
reverse=True,
)
return [
{
"actor": name,
"score": data["score"],
"consistent": len(data["consistent_evidence"]),
"inconsistent": len(data["inconsistent_evidence"]),
"confidence": self._score_to_confidence(data["score"]),
}
for name, data in ranked
]
def _score_to_confidence(self, score):
if score >= 80:
return "HIGH"
elif score >= 40:
return "MODERATE"
else:
return "LOW"
def analyze_infrastructure_overlap(campaign_a_infra, campaign_b_infra):
"""Compare infrastructure between two campaigns for attribution."""
overlap = {
"shared_ips": set(campaign_a_infra.get("ips", [])).intersection(
campaign_b_infra.get("ips", [])
),
"shared_domains": set(campaign_a_infra.get("domains", [])).intersection(
campaign_b_infra.get("domains", [])
),
"shared_asns": set(campaign_a_infra.get("asns", [])).intersection(
campaign_b_infra.get("asns", [])
),
"shared_registrars": set(campaign_a_infra.get("registrars", [])).intersection(
campaign_b_infra.get("registrars", [])
),
}
overlap_score = 0
if overlap["shared_ips"]:
overlap_score += 30
if overlap["shared_domains"]:
overlap_score += 25
if overlap["shared_asns"]:
overlap_score += 15
if overlap["shared_registrars"]:
overlap_score += 10
return {
"overlap": {k: list(v) for k, v in overlap.items()},
"overlap_score": overlap_score,
"assessment": "STRONG" if overlap_score >= 40 else "MODERATE" if overlap_score >= 20 else "WEAK",
}
from attackcti import attack_client
def compare_campaign_ttps(campaign_techniques, known_actor_techniques):
"""Compare campaign TTPs against known threat actor profiles."""
campaign_set = set(campaign_techniques)
actor_set = set(known_actor_techniques)
common = campaign_set.intersection(actor_set)
unique_campaign = campaign_set - actor_set
unique_actor = actor_set - campaign_set
jaccard = len(common) / len(campaign_set.union(actor_set)) if campaign_set.union(actor_set) else 0
return {
"common_techniques": sorted(common),
"common_count": len(common),
"unique_to_campaign": sorted(unique_campaign),
"unique_to_actor": sorted(unique_actor),
"jaccard_similarity": round(jaccard, 3),
"overlap_percentage": round(len(common) / len(campaign_set) * 100, 1) if campaign_set else 0,
}
def generate_attribution_report(analyzer):
"""Generate structured attribution assessment report."""
rankings = analyzer.rank_hypotheses()
report = {
"assessment_date": "2026-02-23",
"total_evidence_items": len(analyzer.evidence),
"hypotheses_evaluated": len(analyzer.hypotheses),
"rankings": rankings,
"primary_attribution": rankings[0] if rankings else None,
"evidence_summary": [
{
"index": i,
"category": e["category"],
"description": e["description"],
"confidence": e["confidence"],
}
for i, e in enumerate(analyzer.evidence)
],
}
return report
npx claudepluginhub 26zl/cybersec-toolkit --plugin cybersec-toolkitSystematically evaluates evidence to determine which threat actor is responsible for a cyber operation. Covers collecting and weighting attribution indicators using the Diamond Model and Analysis of Competing Hypotheses.
Analyzes campaign attribution evidence using Diamond Model and ACH to identify threat actors from infrastructure, TTPs, malware similarities, and patterns. For cybersecurity incident investigations.
Analyzes cyber attack campaign attribution evidence using Diamond Model and ACH, evaluating infrastructure overlap, TTP consistency, malware similarity, timing patterns, and language traces to rank threat actors by confidence.