Cloud computing environments generate high-dimensional, large-scale, and highly dynamic network traffic, making intrusion diagnosis challenging due to evolving attack patterns, severe traffic imbalance, and limited availability of labeled data. To address these challenges, this study presents an unsupervised, cloud-centric intrusion diagnosis framework that integrates autoencoder-based representation learning with density-based attack categorization. A dual-stage autoencoder is trained exclusively on benign traffic to learn compact latent representations and to identify anomalous flows using reconstruction-error analysis, enabling effective anomaly detection without prior attack labels. The detected anomalies are subsequently grouped using density-based learning to uncover latent attack structures and support fine-grained multiclass intrusion diagnosis under varying attack densities. Experiments conducted on the large-scale CSE-CIC-IDS2018 dataset demonstrate that the proposed framework achieves an anomaly detection accuracy of 99.46%, with high recall and low false-negative rates in the optimal latent-space configuration. The density-based classification stage achieves an overall multiclass attack classification accuracy of 98.79%, effectively handling both majority and minority attack categories. Clustering quality evaluation reports a Silhouette Score of 0.9857 and a Davies–Bouldin Index of 0.0091, indicating strong cluster compactness and separability. Comparative analysis against representative supervised and unsupervised baselines confirms the framework’s scalability and robustness under highly imbalanced cloud traffic, highlighting its suitability for future Internet cloud security ecosystems.
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Suresh K. S
SASTRA University
Thenmozhi Elumalai
Optimal Solutions (United States)
Radhakrishnan Rajamani
Galgotias University
Future Internet
University of Delhi
Manipal Academy of Higher Education
Multimedia University
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synapsesocial.com/papers/69706c87b6488063ad5c18bb — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/fi18010054