tor/doc/design-paper/blocking.tex
2006-08-10 08:13:41 +00:00

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\begin{document}
\title{Design of a blocking-resistant anonymity system}
\author{}
\maketitle
\pagestyle{plain}
\begin{abstract}
...
\end{abstract}
\section{Introduction and Goals}
Websites like Wikipedia and Blogspot are increasingly being blocked by
government-level firewalls around the world.
China is the third largest user base for Tor clients~\cite{geoip-tor}.
Many people already want it, and the current Tor design is easy to block
(by blocking the directory authorities, by blocking all the server
IP addresses, or by filtering the signature of the Tor TLS handshake).
Now that we've got an overlay network, we're most of the way there in
terms of building a blocking-resistant tool.
And it improves the anonymity that Tor can provide to add more different
classes of users and goals to the Tor network.
\subsection{A single system that works for multiple blocked domains}
We want this to work for people in China, people in Iran, people in
Thailand, people in firewalled corporate networks, etc. The blocking
censor will be at different stages of the arms race in different places;
and likely the list of blocked addresses will be different in each
location too.
\section{Adversary assumptions}
\label{sec:adversary}
Three main network attacks currently:
\begin{tightlist}
\item Block destination by string matches in TCP packets.
\item Block destination by IP address.
\item Intercept DNS requests.
\end{tightlist}
Assume the network firewall has very limited CPU [clayton06] %~\cite{clayton06}.
Assume that readers of blocked content will not be punished much
(relative to writers).
\section{Related schemes}
\subsection{public single-hop proxies}
\subsection{personal single-hop proxies}
Easier to deploy; might not require client-side software.
\subsection{break your sensitive strings into multiple tcp packets}
\subsection{steganography}
% \subsection{}
\section{Useful building blocks}
\subsection{Tor}
Tor provides three security properties:
\begin{tightlist}
\item A local observer can't learn, or influence, your destination.
\item The destination, or somebody watching the destination, can't learn
your location.
\item No single piece of the infrastructure can link you to your
destination.
\end{tightlist}
We care most clearly about property number 1. But when the arms race
progresses, property 2 will become important -- so the blocking adversary
can't learn user+destination just by volunteering a relay. It's not so
clear to see that property 3 is important, but consider websites and
services that are pressured into treating clients from certain network
locations differently.
Other benefits:
\begin{tightlist}
\item Separates the role of relay from the role of exit node.
\item (Re)builds circuits automatically in the background, based on
whichever paths work.
\end{tightlist}
\subsection{Tor circuits}
can build arbitrary overlay paths given a set of descriptors [blossom] %~\cite{blossom}
\subsection{Tor directory servers}
\subsection{Tor user base}
\section{The Design}
\subsection{Bridge relays}
Some Tor users on the free side of the network will opt to become bridge
relays. They will relay a bit of traffic and don't allow exits. They
sign up on the bridge directory authorities, below.
...need to outline instructions for a Tor config that will publish
to an alternate directory authority, and for controller commands
that will do this cleanly.
\subsection{The bridge directory authority (BDA)}
They aggregate server descriptors just like the main authorities, and
answer all queries as usual, except they don't publish network statuses.
So once you know a bridge relay's key, you can get the most recent
server descriptor for it.
XXX need to figure out how to fetch some statuses from the BDA without
fetching all statuses. A new URL to fetch I presume?
\subsection{Blocked users}
If a blocked user knows about a working bridge relay, then he can make
secure connections to the BDA to update his knowledge about bridge
relays, and he can make secure connections to the main Tor network
and directory servers to build circuits and connect to the rest of
the Internet.
So now we've reduced the problem from how to circumvent the firewall
for all transactions (and how to know that the pages you get are the
real ones) to how to learn about a working bridge relay. They can
be distributed in three ways:
\begin{tightlist}
\item IP:dirport, so the user can connect directly to the bridge
relay, learn the associated
server descriptor, and start building circuits. This is great, but what if
the firewall creates signatures for plaintext http requests for server
descriptors, to block them? One option is a workaround that changes the
appearance of the plaintext at each step (I can imagine a simple scheme
where we send a 16 byte key, and then encrypt the rest of the stream with
that key -- it doesn't provide actual confidentiality, but it's hard to
recognize that it's a Tor connection); another option is to conclude that
it will be better to tunnel through a Tor circuit when fetching them.
\item Key fingerprint, which lets you lookup the most recent server
descriptor at the BDA (assuming you can reach it).
\item A blinded token, which can be exchanged at the BDA (assuming you
can reach it) for a new IP:dirport or server descriptor.
\end{tightlist}
See the following section for ways to bootstrap knowledge of your first
bridge relay, and ways to maintain connectivity once you know a few
bridge relays.
\section{Discovering and maintaining working bridge relays}
\subsection{Initial network discovery}
We make the assumption that the firewall is not perfect. People can
get around it through the usual means, or they know a friend who can.
If they can't get around it at all, then we can't help them -- they
should go meet more people.
Thus they can reach the BDA. From here we either assume a social
network or other mechanism for learning IP:dirport or key fingerprints
as above, or we assume an account server that allows us to limit the
number of new bridge relays an external attacker can discover.
\subsection{The account server}
Users can establish reputations, perhaps based on social network
connectivity, perhaps based on not getting their bridge relays blocked,
\section{Other issues}
\subsection{How do we know if a bridge relay has been blocked?}
We need some mechanism for testing reachability from inside the
blocked area. The easiest answer is for certain users inside
the area to sign up as testing relays, and then we can route through
them and see if it works. But we're back to the earlier question
\subsection{Tunneling directory lookups through Tor}
All you need to do is bootstrap, and then you can use
your Tor connection to maintain your Tor connection,
including doing secure directory fetches.
\subsection{Predictable SSL ports}
We should encourage most servers to listen on port 443, which is
where SSL normally listens.
Is that all it will take, or should we set things up so some fraction
of them pick random ports? I can see that both helping and hurting.
\subsection{Predictable TLS handshakes}
Right now Tor has some predictable strings in its TLS handshakes.
These can be removed; but should they be replaced with nothing, or
should we try to emulate some popular browser? In any case our
protocol demands a pair of certs on both sides -- how much will this
make Tor handshakes stand out?
\section{Anonymity issues from becoming a bridge relay}
You can actually harm your anonymity by relaying traffic in Tor. This is
the same issue that ordinary Tor servers face. On the other hand, it
provides improved anonymity against some attacks too:
\begin{verbatim}
http://wiki.noreply.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/TorFAQ#ServerAnonymity
\end{verbatim}
\section{Future designs}
\subsection{Bridges inside the blocked network too}
Assuming actually crossing the firewall is the risky part of the
operation, can we have some bridge relays inside the blocked area too,
and more established users can use them as relays so they don't need to
communicate over the firewall directly at all? A simple example here is
to make new blocked users into internal bridges also -- so they sign up
on the BDA as part of doing their query, and we give out their addresses
rather than (or along with) the external bridge addresses. This design
is a lot trickier because it brings in the complexity of whether the
internal bridges will remain available, can maintain reachability with
the outside world, etc.
Hidden services as bridges.
%\bibliographystyle{plain} \bibliography{tor-design}
\end{document}