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Unsupervised Cross-Protocol Anomaly Analysis in Mobile Core Networks via Multi-Embedding Models Consensus

Published 16 Mar 2026 in cs.CR | (2603.15344v1)

Abstract: Mobile core networks rely on several signalling protocols in parallel, such as SS7, Diameter, and GTP, so many security-relevant problems become visible only when their interactions are analyzed jointly. At the same time, labeled examples of real attacks and cross-protocol misconfigurations are scarce, which complicates supervised detection. We therefore study unsupervised cross-protocol anomaly analysis on fused representations that combine SS7, Diameter, and GTP signalling. For each subscriber, we aggregate messages into per-minute fused records, serialize each record as text, embed it with several models, and apply unsupervised anomaly detection. We then assign each record a consensus score equal to the number of embedding models that flag it as anomalous. For evaluation, we generate cross-protocol-plausible synthetic anomalies by swapping one field group at a time between pairs of records, preserving per-message validity while making the fused view contradictory. On 219,294 fused records, 44.15% are flagged by at least one model, but only 0.97% reach full agreement across all six. Higher consensus is strongly associated with synthetic records, where for k=1-4 the odds that a flagged record is synthetic are hundreds of times greater than for original records, and for k>=5 all flagged records are synthetic, with extremely small p-values. Cosine distances between synthetic and original records also increase with consensus, suggesting clearer separation in embedding space. These results support the use of multi-embedding consensus to prioritize a much smaller set of candidate cross-protocol inconsistencies for further inspection.

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