In standard quantitative analysis of text, N-grams are sequences of N tokens (for example, words or characters). For instance, given the text The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog, if our tokens are words, then the 1-grams are the, quick, brown, fox, jumped, over, the, lazy, and dog. The 2-grams are the quick, quick brown, brown fox, and so on. The 3-grams are the quick brown, quick brown fox, brown fox jumped, and so on. Just like the local statistics of the text allowed us to build a Markov chain to perform statistical predictions and text generation from a corpus, N-grams allow us to model the local statistical properties of our corpus. Our ultimate goal is to utilize the counts of N-grams to help us predict whether a sample is malicious or benign. In this recipe, we demonstrate how to extract N-gram counts from a sample.
United States
Great Britain
India
Germany
France
Canada
Russia
Spain
Brazil
Australia
Singapore
Hungary
Ukraine
Luxembourg
Estonia
Lithuania
South Korea
Turkey
Switzerland
Colombia
Taiwan
Chile
Norway
Ecuador
Indonesia
New Zealand
Cyprus
Denmark
Finland
Poland
Malta
Czechia
Austria
Sweden
Italy
Egypt
Belgium
Portugal
Slovenia
Ireland
Romania
Greece
Argentina
Netherlands
Bulgaria
Latvia
South Africa
Malaysia
Japan
Slovakia
Philippines
Mexico
Thailand