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824 lines
36 KiB
TeX
824 lines
36 KiB
TeX
\documentclass[times,10pt,twocolumn]{article}
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% If an URL ends up with '%'s in it, that's because the line *in the .bib/.tex
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% file* is too long, so break it there (it doesn't matter if the next line is
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% indented with spaces). -DH
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\begin{document}
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%% Use dvipdfm instead. --DH
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\title{Tor: Design of a Next-Generation Onion Router}
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%\author{Anonymous}
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%\author{Roger Dingledine \\ The Free Haven Project \\ arma@freehaven.net \and
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%Nick Mathewson \\ The Free Haven Project \\ nickm@freehaven.net \and
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%Paul Syverson \\ Naval Research Lab \\ syverson@itd.nrl.navy.mil}
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\maketitle
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\thispagestyle{empty}
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\begin{abstract}
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We present Tor, a connection-based low-latency anonymous communication
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system. It is intended as an update and replacement for onion routing
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and addresses many limitations in the original onion routing design.
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Tor works in a real-world Internet environment,
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requires little synchronization or coordination between nodes, and
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protects against known anonymity-breaking attacks as well
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as or better than other systems with similar design parameters.
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\end{abstract}
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%\begin{center}
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%\textbf{Keywords:} anonymity, peer-to-peer, remailer, nymserver, reply block
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%\end{center}
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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\Section{Overview}
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\label{sec:intro}
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Onion routing is a distributed overlay network designed to anonymize
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low-latency TCP-based applications such as web browsing, secure shell,
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and instant messaging. Users choose a path through the network and
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build a \emph{virtual circuit}, in which each node in the path knows its
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predecessor and successor, but no others. Traffic flowing down the circuit
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is sent in fixed-size \emph{cells}, which are unwrapped by a symmetric key
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at each node, revealing the downstream node. The original onion routing
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project published several design and analysis papers
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\cite{or-jsac98,or-discex00,or-ih96,or-pet00}. While there was briefly
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a wide area onion routing network,
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the only long-running and publicly accessible
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implementation was a fragile proof-of-concept that ran on a single
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machine. Many critical design and deployment issues were never implemented,
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and the design has not been updated in several years.
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Here we describe Tor, a protocol for asynchronous, loosely
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federated onion routers that provides the following improvements over
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the old onion routing design:
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\begin{tightlist}
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\item \textbf{Perfect forward secrecy:} The original onion routing
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design is vulnerable to a single hostile node recording traffic and later
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forcing successive nodes in the circuit to decrypt it. Rather than using
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onions to lay the circuits, Tor uses an incremental or \emph{telescoping}
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path-building design, where the initiator negotiates session keys with
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each successive hop in the circuit. Onion replay detection is no longer
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necessary, and the network as a whole is more reliable to boot, since
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the initiator knows which hop failed and can try extending to a new node.
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\item \textbf{Applications talk to the onion proxy via Socks:}
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The original onion routing design required a separate proxy for each
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supported application protocol, resulting in a lot of extra code (most
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of which was never written) and also meaning that a lot of TCP-based
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applications were not supported. Tor uses the unified and standard Socks
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\cite{socks4,socks5} interface, allowing us to support any TCP-based
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program without modification.
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\item \textbf{Many applications can share one circuit:} The original
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onion routing design built one circuit for each request. Aside from the
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performance issues of doing public key operations for every request, it
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also turns out that regular communications patterns mean building lots
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of circuits, which can endanger anonymity.
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The very first onion routing design \cite{or-ih96} protected against
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this to some extent by hiding network access behind an onion
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router/firewall that was also forwarding traffic from other nodes.
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However, even if this meant complete protection, many users can
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benefit from onion routing for which neither running one's own node
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nor such firewall configurations are adequately convenient to be
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feasible. Those users, especially if they engage in certain unusual
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communication behaviors, may be identifiable \cite{wright03}. To
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complicate the possibility of such attacks Tor multiplexes many
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connections down each circuit, but still rotates the circuit
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periodically to avoid too much linkability from requests on a single
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circuit.
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\item \textbf{No mixing or traffic shaping:} The original onion routing
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design called for full link padding both between onion routers and between
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onion proxies (that is, users) and onion routers \cite{or-jsac98}. The
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later analysis paper \cite{or-pet00} suggested \emph{traffic shaping}
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to provide similar protection but use less bandwidth, but did not go
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into detail. However, recent research \cite{econymics} and deployment
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experience \cite{freedom21-security} indicate that this level of resource
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use is not practical or economical; and even full link padding is still
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vulnerable to active attacks \cite{defensive-dropping}.
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%[An upcoming FC04 paper. I'll add a cite when it's out. -RD]
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\item \textbf{Leaky pipes:} Through in-band signalling within the
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circuit, Tor initiators can direct traffic to nodes partway down the
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circuit. This allows for long-range padding to frustrate traffic
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shape and volume attacks at the initiator \cite{defensive-dropping},
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but because circuits are used by more than one application, it also
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allows traffic to exit the circuit from the middle -- thus
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frustrating traffic shape and volume attacks based on observing exit
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points.
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%Or something like that. hm. Tone this down maybe? Or support it. -RD
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%How's that? -PS
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\item \textbf{Congestion control:} Earlier anonymity designs do not
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address traffic bottlenecks. Unfortunately, typical approaches to load
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balancing and flow control in overlay networks involve inter-node control
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communication and global views of traffic. Our decentralized ack-based
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congestion control maintains reasonable anonymity while allowing nodes
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at the edges of the network to detect congestion or flooding attacks
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and send less data until the congestion subsides.
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\item \textbf{Directory servers:} Rather than attempting to flood
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link-state information through the network, which can be unreliable and
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open to partitioning attacks or outright deception, Tor takes a simplified
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view towards distributing link-state information. Certain more trusted
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onion routers also serve as directory servers; they provide signed
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\emph{directories} describing all routers they know about, and which
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are currently up. Users periodically download these directories via HTTP.
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\item \textbf{End-to-end integrity checking:} Without integrity checking
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on traffic going through the network, an onion router can change the
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contents of cells as they pass by, e.g. by redirecting a connection on
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the fly so it connects to a different webserver, or by tagging encrypted
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traffic and looking for traffic at the network edges that has been
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tagged \cite{minion-design}.
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\item \textbf{Robustness to node failure:} router twins
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\item \textbf{Exit policies:}
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Tor provides a consistent mechanism for each node to specify and
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advertise an exit policy.
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\item \textbf{Rendezvous points:}
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location-protected servers
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\end{tightlist}
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We review previous work in Section \ref{sec:background}, describe
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our goals and assumptions in Section \ref{sec:assumptions},
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and then address the above list of improvements in Sections
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\ref{sec:design}-\ref{sec:maintaining-anonymity}. We then summarize
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how our design stands up to known attacks, and conclude with a list of
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open problems.
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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\Section{Background and threat model}
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\label{sec:background}
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\SubSection{Related work}
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\label{sec:related-work}
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Modern anonymity designs date to Chaum's Mix-Net\cite{chaum-mix} design of
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1981. Chaum proposed hiding sender-recipient connections by wrapping
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messages in several layers of public key cryptography, and relaying them
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through a path composed of Mix servers. Mix servers in turn decrypt, delay,
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and re-order messages, before relay them along the path towards their
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destinations.
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Subsequent relay-based anonymity designs have diverged in two
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principal directions. Some have attempted to maximize anonymity at
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the cost of introducing comparatively large and variable latencies,
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for example, Babel\cite{babel}, Mixmaster\cite{mixmaster-spec}, and
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Mixminion\cite{minion-design}. Because of this
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decision, such \emph{high-latency} networks are well-suited for anonymous
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email, but introduce too much lag for interactive tasks such as web browsing,
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internet chat, or SSH connections.
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Tor belongs to the second category: \emph{low-latency} designs that
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attempt to anonymize interactive network traffic. Because such
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traffic tends to involve a relatively large numbers of packets, it is
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difficult to prevent an attacker who can eavesdrop entry and exit
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points from correlating packets entering the anonymity network with
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packets leaving it. Although some work has been done to frustrate
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these attacks, most designs protect primarily against traffic analysis
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rather than traffic confirmation \cite{or-jsac98}. One can pad and
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limit communication to a constant rate or at least to control the
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variation in traffic shape. This can have prohibitive bandwidth costs
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and/or performance limitations. One can also use a cascade (fixed
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shared route) with a relatively fixed set of users. This assumes a
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significant degree of agreement and provides an easier target for an active
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attacker since the endpoints are generally known. However, a practical
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network with both of these features and thousands of active users has
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been run for many years (the Java Anon Proxy, aka Web MIXes,
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\cite{web-mix}).
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Another low latency design that was proposed independently and at
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about the same time as onion routing was PipeNet \cite{pipenet}.
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This provided anonymity protections that were stronger than onion routing's,
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but at the cost of allowing a single user to shut down the network simply
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by not sending. It was also never implemented or formally published.
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The simplest low-latency designs are single-hop proxies such as the
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Anonymizer \cite{anonymizer}, wherein a single trusted server removes
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identifying users' data before relaying it. These designs are easy to
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analyze, but require end-users to trust the anonymizing proxy.
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More complex are distributed-trust, channel-based anonymizing systems. In
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these designs, a user establishes one or more medium-term bidirectional
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end-to-end tunnels to exit servers, and uses those tunnels to deliver a
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number of low-latency packets to and from one or more destinations per
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tunnel. Establishing tunnels is comparatively expensive and typically
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requires public-key cryptography, whereas relaying packets along a tunnel is
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comparatively inexpensive. Because a tunnel crosses several servers, no
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single server can learn the user's communication partners.
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Systems such as earlier versions of Freedom and onion routing
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build the anonymous channel all at once (using an onion). Later
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designs of Freedom and onion routing as described herein build
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the channel in stages as does AnonNet
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\cite{anonnet}. Amongst other things, this makes perfect forward
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secrecy feasible.
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Some systems, such as Crowds \cite{crowds-tissec}, do not rely on the
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changing appearance of packets to hide the path; rather they employ
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mechanisms so that an intermediary cannot be sure when it is
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receiving from/sending to the ultimate initiator. There is no public-key
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encryption needed for Crowds, but the responder and all data are
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visible to all nodes on the path so that anonymity of connection
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initiator depends on filtering all identifying information from the
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data stream. Crowds is also designed only for HTTP traffic.
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Hordes \cite{hordes-jcs} is based on Crowds but also uses multicast
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responses to hide the initiator. Herbivore \cite{herbivore} and
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P5 \cite{p5} go even further requiring broadcast.
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They each use broadcast in very different ways, and tradeoffs are made to
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make broadcast more practical. Both Herbivore and P5 are designed primarily
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for communication between communicating peers, although Herbivore
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permits external connections by requesting a peer to serve as a proxy.
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Allowing easy connections to nonparticipating responders or recipients
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is a practical requirement for many users, e.g., to visit
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nonparticipating Web sites or to exchange mail with nonparticipating
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recipients.
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Distributed-trust anonymizing systems differ in how they prevent attackers
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from controlling too many servers and thus compromising too many user paths.
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Some protocols rely on a centrally maintained set of well-known anonymizing
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servers. Current Tor design falls into this category.
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Others (such as Tarzan and MorphMix) allow unknown users to run
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servers, while using a limited resource (DHT space for Tarzan; IP space for
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MorphMix) to prevent an attacker from owning too much of the network.
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Crowds uses a centralized ``blender'' to enforce Crowd membership
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policy. For small crowds it is suggested that familiarity with all
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members is adequate. For large diverse crowds, limiting accounts in
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control of any one party is more difficult:
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``(e.g., the blender administrator sets up an account for a user only
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after receiving a written, notarized request from that user) and each
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account to one jondo, and by monitoring and limiting the number of
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jondos on any one net- work (using IP address), the attacker would be
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forced to launch jondos using many different identities and on many
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different networks to succeed'' \cite{crowds-tissec}.
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[XXX I'm considering the subsection as ended here for now. I'm leaving the
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following notes in case we want to revisit any of them. -PS]
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There are also many systems which are intended for anonymous
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and/or censorship resistant file sharing. [XXX Should we list all these
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or just say it's out of scope for the paper?
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eternity, gnunet, freenet, freehaven, publius, tangler, taz/rewebber]
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Channel-based anonymizing systems also differ in their use of dummy traffic.
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[XXX]
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Finally, several systems provide low-latency anonymity without channel-based
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communication. Crowds and [XXX] provide anonymity for HTTP requests; [...]
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[XXX Mention error recovery?]
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anonymizer\\
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pipenet\\
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freedom v1\\
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freedom v2\\
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onion routing v1\\
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isdn-mixes\\
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crowds\\
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real-time mixes, web mixes\\
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anonnet (marc rennhard's stuff)\\
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morphmix\\
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P5\\
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gnunet\\
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rewebbers\\
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tarzan\\
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herbivore\\
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hordes\\
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cebolla (?)\\
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[XXX Close by mentioning where Tor fits.]
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\Section{Design goals and assumptions}
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\label{sec:assumptions}
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\subsection{Goals}
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% Are these really our goals? ;) -NM
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Like other low-latency anonymity designs, Tor seeks to frustrate
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attackers from linking communication partners, or from linking
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multiple communications to or from a single point. Within this
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overriding goal, however, several design considerations have directed
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Tor's evolution.
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First, we have tried to build a {\bf deployable} system. [XXX why?]
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This requirement precludes designs that are expensive to run (for
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example, by requiring more bandwidth than volunteers are easy to
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provide); designs that place a heavy liability burden on operators
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(for example, by allowing attackers to implicate operators in illegal
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activities); and designs that are difficult or expensive to implement
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(for example, by requiring kernel patches to many operating systems,
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or ).
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Second, the system must be {\bf usable}. A hard-to-use system has
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fewer users---and because anonymity systems hide users among users, a
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system with fewer users provides less anonymity. Thus, usability is
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not only a convenience, but is a security requirement for anonymity
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systems.
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Third, the protocol must be {\bf extensible}, so that it can serve as
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a test-bed for future research in low-latency anonymity systems.
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(Note that while an extensible protocol benefits researchers, there is
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a danger that differing choices of extensions will render users
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distinguishable. Thus, implementations should not permit different
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protocol extensions to coexist in a single deployed network.)
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The protocol's design and security parameters must be {\bf
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conservative}. Additional features impose implementation and
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complexity costs. [XXX Say that we don't want to try to come up with
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speculative solutions to problems we don't KNOW how to solve? -NM]
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[XXX mention something about robustness? But we really aren't that
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robust. We just assume that tunneled protocols tolerate connection
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loss. -NM]
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\subsection{Non-goals}
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In favoring conservative, deployable designs, we have explicitly
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deferred a number of goals---not because they are not desirable in
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anonymity systems---but because solving them is either solved
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elsewhere, or an area of active research without a generally accepted
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solution.
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Unlike Tarzan or Morphmix, Tor does not attempt to scale to completely
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decentralized peer-to-peer environments with thousands of short-lived
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servers.
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Tor does not claim to provide a definitive solution to end-to-end
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timing or intersection attacks for users who do not run their own
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Onion Routers.
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Tor does not provide ``protocol normalization'' like the Anonymizer,
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Privoxy, or XXX. In order to provide client indistinguishibility for
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complex and variable protocols such as HTTP, Tor must be layered with
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a proxy such as Privoxy or XXX. Similarly, Tor does not currently
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integrate tunneling for non-stream-based protocols; this too must be
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provided by an external service.
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Tor is not steganographic. It doesn't try to conceal which users are
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sending or receiving communications via Tor.
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\SubSection{Adversary Model}
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\label{subsec:adversary-model}
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Like all practical low-latency systems, Tor is broken against a global
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passive adversary, the most commonly assumed adversary for analysis of
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theoretical anonymous communication designs. The adversary we assume
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is weaker than global with respect to distribution, but it is not
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merely passive.
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We assume a threat model that expands on that from \cite{or-pet00}.
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The basic adversary components we consider are:
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\begin{description}
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\item[Observer:] can observe a connection (e.g., a sniffer on an
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Internet router), but cannot initiate connections. Observations may
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include timing and/or volume of packets as well as appearance of
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individual packets (including headers and content).
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\item[Disrupter:] can delay (indefinitely) or corrupt traffic on a
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link. Can change all those things that an observer can observe up to
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the limits of computational ability (e.g., cannot forge signatures
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unless a key is compromised).
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\item[Hostile initiator:] can initiate (destroy) connections with
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specific routes as well as varying the timing and content of traffic
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on the connections it creates. A special case of the disrupter with
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additional abilities appropriate to its role in forming connections.
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\item[Hostile responder:] can vary the traffic on the connections made
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to it including refusing them entirely, intentionally modifying what
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it sends and at what rate, and selectively closing them. Also a
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special case of the disrupter.
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\item[Key breaker:] can break the longterm private decryption key of a
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Tor-node.
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\item[Compromised Tor-node:] can arbitrarily manipulate the connections
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under its control, as well as creating new connections (that pass
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through itself).
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\end{description}
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All feasible adversaries can be composed out of these basic
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adversaries. This includes combinations such as one or more
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compromised Tor-nodes cooperating with disrupters of links on which
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those nodes are not adjacent, or such as combinations of hostile
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outsiders and link observers (who watch links between adjacent
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Tor-nodes). Note that one type of observer might be a Tor-node. This
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is sometimes called an honest-but-curious adversary. While an observer
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Tor-node will perform only correct protocol interactions, it might
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share information about connections and cannot be assumed to destroy
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session keys at end of a session. Note that a compromised Tor-node is
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stronger than any other adversary component in the sense that
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replacing a component of any adversary with a compromised Tor-node
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results in a stronger overall adversary (assuming that the compromised
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Tor-node retains the same signature keys and other private
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state-information as the component it replaces).
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|
In general we are more focused on traffic analysis attacks than
|
|
traffic confirmation attacks. A user who runs a Tor proxy on his own
|
|
machine, connects to some remote Tor-node and makes a connection to an
|
|
open Internet site, such as a public web server, is vulnerable to
|
|
traffic confirmation. That is, an active attacker who suspects that
|
|
the particular client is communicating with the particular server will
|
|
be able to confirm this if she can attack and observe both the
|
|
connection between the Tor network and the client and that between the
|
|
Tor network and the server. Even a purely passive attacker will be
|
|
able to confirm if the timing and volume properties of the traffic on
|
|
the connnection are unique enough. This is not to say that Tor offers
|
|
no resistance to traffic confirmation; it does. We defer discussion
|
|
of this point and of particular attacks until Section~\ref{sec:attacks},
|
|
after we have described Tor in more detail. However, we note here some
|
|
basic assumptions that affect the threat model.
|
|
|
|
[XXX I think this next subsection should be cut, leaving its points
|
|
for the attacks section. But I'm leaving it here for now. The above
|
|
line refers to the immediately following SubSection.-PS]
|
|
|
|
|
|
\SubSection{Known attacks against low-latency anonymity systems}
|
|
\label{subsec:known-attacks}
|
|
|
|
We discuss each of these attacks in more detail below, along with the
|
|
aspects of the Tor design that provide defense. We provide a summary
|
|
of the attacks and our defenses against them in Section~\ref{sec:attacks}.
|
|
|
|
Passive attacks:
|
|
simple observation,
|
|
timing correlation,
|
|
size correlation,
|
|
option distinguishability,
|
|
|
|
Active attacks:
|
|
key compromise,
|
|
iterated subpoena,
|
|
run recipient,
|
|
run a hostile node,
|
|
compromise entire path,
|
|
selectively DOS servers,
|
|
introduce timing into messages,
|
|
directory attacks,
|
|
tagging attacks
|
|
|
|
|
|
\SubSection{Assumptions}
|
|
|
|
All dirservers are honest and trusted.
|
|
|
|
Somewhere between ten percent and twenty percent of nodes
|
|
are compromised. In some circumstances, e.g., if the Tor network
|
|
is running on a hardened network where all operators have had careful
|
|
background checks, the percent of compromised nodes might be much
|
|
lower. Also, it may be worthwhile to consider cases where many
|
|
of the `bad' nodes are not fully compromised but simply (passive)
|
|
observing adversaries. We assume that all adversary components,
|
|
regardless of their capabilities are collaborating and are connected
|
|
in an offline clique.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Threat model
|
|
- Mostly reliable nodes: not trusted.
|
|
- Small group of trusted dirserv ops
|
|
- Many users of diff bandwidth come and go.
|
|
|
|
[XXX what else?]
|
|
|
|
|
|
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
|
|
|
\Section{The Tor Design}
|
|
\label{sec:design}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\Section{Other design decisions}
|
|
|
|
\SubSection{Exit policies and abuse}
|
|
\label{subsec:exitpolicies}
|
|
|
|
\SubSection{Directory Servers}
|
|
\label{subsec:dir-servers}
|
|
|
|
\Section{Rendezvous points: location privacy}
|
|
\label{sec:rendezvous}
|
|
|
|
Rendezvous points are a building block for \emph{location-hidden services}
|
|
(aka responder anonymity) in the Tor network. Location-hidden
|
|
services means Bob can offer a tcp service, such as an Apache webserver,
|
|
without revealing the IP of that service.
|
|
|
|
We provide this censorship resistance for Bob by allowing him to
|
|
advertise several onion routers (his \emph{Introduction Points}) as his
|
|
public location. Alice, the client, chooses a node for her \emph{Meeting
|
|
Point}. She connects to one of Bob's introduction points, informs him
|
|
about her meeting point, and then waits for him to connect to the meeting
|
|
point. This extra level of indirection means Bob's introduction points
|
|
don't open themselves up to abuse by serving files directly, eg if Bob
|
|
chooses a node in France to serve material distateful to the French. The
|
|
extra level of indirection also allows Bob to respond to some requests
|
|
and ignore others.
|
|
|
|
We provide the necessary glue so that Alice can view webpages from Bob's
|
|
location-hidden webserver with minimal invasive changes. Both Alice and
|
|
Bob must run local onion proxies.
|
|
|
|
The steps of a rendezvous:
|
|
\begin{tightlist}
|
|
\item Bob chooses some Introduction Points, and advertises them on a
|
|
Distributed Hash Table (DHT).
|
|
\item Bob establishes onion routing connections to each of his
|
|
Introduction Points, and waits.
|
|
\item Alice learns about Bob's service out of band (perhaps Bob told her,
|
|
or she found it on a website). She looks up the details of Bob's
|
|
service from the DHT.
|
|
\item Alice chooses and establishes a Meeting Point (MP) for this
|
|
transaction.
|
|
\item Alice goes to one of Bob's Introduction Points, and gives it a blob
|
|
(encrypted for Bob) which tells him about herself, the Meeting Point
|
|
she chose, and the first half of an ephemeral key handshake. The
|
|
Introduction Point sends the blob to Bob.
|
|
\item Bob chooses whether to ignore the blob, or to onion route to MP.
|
|
Let's assume the latter.
|
|
\item MP plugs together Alice and Bob. Note that MP can't recognize Alice,
|
|
Bob, or the data they transmit (they share a session key).
|
|
\item Alice sends a Begin cell along the circuit. It arrives at Bob's
|
|
onion proxy. Bob's onion proxy connects to Bob's webserver.
|
|
\item Data goes back and forth as usual.
|
|
\end{tightlist}
|
|
|
|
When establishing an introduction point, Bob provides the onion router
|
|
with a public ``introduction'' key. The hash of this public key
|
|
identifies a unique service, and (since Bob is required to sign his
|
|
messages) prevents anybody else from usurping Bob's introduction point
|
|
in the future. Bob uses the same public key when establish the other
|
|
introduction points for that service.
|
|
|
|
The blob that Alice gives the introduction point includes a hash of Bob's
|
|
public key to identify the service, an optional initial authentication
|
|
token (the introduction point can do prescreening, eg to block replays),
|
|
and (encrypted to Bob's public key) the location of the meeting point,
|
|
a meeting cookie Bob should tell the meeting point so he gets connected to
|
|
Alice, an optional authentication token so Bob choose whether to respond,
|
|
and the first half of a DH key exchange. When Bob connects to the meeting
|
|
place and gets connected to Alice's pipe, his first cell contains the
|
|
other half of the DH key exchange.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Integration with user applications}
|
|
|
|
For each service Bob offers, he configures his local onion proxy to know
|
|
the local IP and port of the server, a strategy for authorizating Alices,
|
|
and a public key. We assume the existence of a robust decentralized
|
|
efficient lookup system which allows authenticated updates, eg
|
|
\cite{cfs:sosp01}. (Each onion router could run a node in this lookup
|
|
system; also note that as a stopgap measure, we can just run a simple
|
|
lookup system on the directory servers.) Bob publishes into the DHT
|
|
(indexed by the hash of the public key) the public key, an expiration
|
|
time (``not valid after''), and the current introduction points for that
|
|
service. Note that Bob's webserver is completely oblivious to the fact
|
|
that it's hidden behind the Tor network.
|
|
|
|
As far as Alice's experience goes, we require that her client interface
|
|
remain a SOCKS proxy, and we require that she shouldn't have to modify
|
|
her applications. Thus we encode all of the necessary information into
|
|
the hostname (more correctly, fully qualified domain name) that Alice
|
|
uses, eg when clicking on a url in her browser. Location-hidden services
|
|
use the special top level domain called `.onion': thus hostnames take the
|
|
form x.y.onion where x encodes the hash of PK, and y is the authentication
|
|
cookie. Alice's onion proxy examines hostnames and recognizes when they're
|
|
destined for a hidden server. If so, it decodes the PK and starts the
|
|
rendezvous as described in the table above.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Previous rendezvous work}
|
|
|
|
Ian Goldberg developed a similar notion of rendezvous points for
|
|
low-latency anonymity systems \cite{ian-thesis}. His ``service tag''
|
|
is the same concept as our ``hash of service's public key''. We make it
|
|
a hash of the public key so it can be self-authenticating, and so the
|
|
client can recognize the same service with confidence later on. His
|
|
design differs from ours in the following ways though. Firstly, Ian
|
|
suggests that the client should manually hunt down a current location of
|
|
the service via Gnutella; whereas our use of the DHT makes lookup faster,
|
|
more robust, and transparent to the user. Secondly, the client and server
|
|
can share ephemeral DH keys, so at no point in the path is the plaintext
|
|
exposed. Thirdly, our design is much more practical for deployment in a
|
|
volunteer network, in terms of getting volunteers to offer introduction
|
|
and meeting point services. The introduction points do not output any
|
|
bytes to the clients. And the meeting points don't know the client,
|
|
the server, or the stuff being transmitted. The indirection scheme
|
|
is also designed with authentication/authorization in mind -- if the
|
|
client doesn't include the right cookie with its request for service,
|
|
the server doesn't even acknowledge its existence.
|
|
|
|
\Section{Maintaining anonymity sets}
|
|
\label{sec:maintaining-anonymity}
|
|
|
|
packet counting attacks work great against initiators. need to do some
|
|
level of obfuscation for that. standard link padding for passive link
|
|
observers. long-range padding for people who own the first hop. are
|
|
we just screwed against people who insert timing signatures into your
|
|
traffic?
|
|
|
|
Even regardless of link padding from Alice to the cloud, there will be
|
|
times when Alice is simply not online. Link padding, at the edges or
|
|
inside the cloud, does not help for this.
|
|
|
|
how often should we pull down directories? how often send updated
|
|
server descs?
|
|
|
|
when we start up the client, should we build a circuit immediately,
|
|
or should the default be to build a circuit only on demand? should we
|
|
fetch a directory immediately?
|
|
|
|
would we benefit from greater synchronization, to blend with the other
|
|
users? would the reduced speed hurt us more?
|
|
|
|
does the "you can't see when i'm starting or ending a stream because
|
|
you can't tell what sort of relay cell it is" idea work, or is just
|
|
a distraction?
|
|
|
|
does running a server actually get you better protection, because traffic
|
|
coming from your node could plausibly have come from elsewhere? how
|
|
much mixing do you need before this is actually plausible, or is it
|
|
immediately beneficial because many adversary can't see your node?
|
|
|
|
do different exit policies at different exit nodes trash anonymity sets,
|
|
or not mess with them much?
|
|
|
|
do we get better protection against a realistic adversary by having as
|
|
many nodes as possible, so he probably can't see the whole network,
|
|
or by having a small number of nodes that mix traffic well? is a
|
|
cascade topology a more realistic way to get defenses against traffic
|
|
confirmation? does the hydra (many inputs, few outputs) topology work
|
|
better? are we going to get a hydra anyway because most nodes will be
|
|
middleman nodes?
|
|
|
|
using a circuit many times is good because it's less cpu work
|
|
good because of predecessor attacks with path rebuilding
|
|
bad because predecessor attacks can be more likely to link you with a
|
|
previous circuit since you're so verbose
|
|
bad because each thing you do on that circuit is linked to the other
|
|
things you do on that circuit
|
|
|
|
Because Tor runs over TCP, when one of the servers goes down it seems
|
|
that all the circuits (and thus streams) going over that server must
|
|
break. This reduces anonymity because everybody needs to reconnect
|
|
right then (does it? how much?) and because exit connections all break
|
|
at the same time, and it also reduces usability. It seems the problem
|
|
is even worse in a p2p environment, because so far such systems don't
|
|
really provide an incentive for nodes to stay connected when they're
|
|
done browsing, so we would expect a much higher churn rate than for
|
|
onion routing. Are there ways of allowing streams to survive the loss
|
|
of a node in the path?
|
|
|
|
|
|
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
|
|
|
\Section{Attacks and Defenses}
|
|
\label{sec:attacks}
|
|
|
|
Below we summarize a variety of attacks and how well our design withstands
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
\begin{enumerate}
|
|
\item \textbf{Passive attacks}
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item \emph{Simple observation.}
|
|
\item \emph{Timing correlation.}
|
|
\item \emph{Size correlation.}
|
|
\item \emph{Option distinguishability.}
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item \textbf{Active attacks}
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item \emph{Key compromise.}
|
|
\item \emph{Iterated subpoena.}
|
|
\item \emph{Run recipient.}
|
|
\item \emph{Run a hostile node.}
|
|
\item \emph{Compromise entire path.}
|
|
\item \emph{Selectively DoS servers.}
|
|
\item \emph{Introduce timing into messages.}
|
|
\item \emph{Tagging attacks.}
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item \textbf{Directory attacks}
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item foo
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\end{enumerate}
|
|
|
|
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
|
|
|
\Section{Future Directions and Open Problems}
|
|
\label{sec:conclusion}
|
|
|
|
Tor brings together many innovations into
|
|
a unified deployable system. But there are still several attacks that
|
|
work quite well, as well as a number of sustainability and run-time
|
|
issues remaining to be ironed out. In particular:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item \emph{Scalability:} Since Tor's emphasis currently is on simplicity
|
|
of design and deployment, the current design won't easily handle more
|
|
than a few hundred servers, because of its clique topology. Restricted
|
|
route topologies \cite{danezis-pets03} promise comparable anonymity
|
|
with much better scaling properties, but we must solve problems like
|
|
how to randomly form the network without introducing net attacks.
|
|
% [cascades are a restricted route topology too. we must mention
|
|
% earlier why we're not satisfied with the cascade approach.]-RD
|
|
% [We do. At least
|
|
\item \emph{Cover traffic:} Currently we avoid cover traffic because
|
|
it introduces clear performance and bandwidth costs, but and its
|
|
security properties are not well understood. With more research
|
|
\cite{SS03,defensive-dropping}, the price/value ratio may change, both for
|
|
link-level cover traffic and also long-range cover traffic. In particular,
|
|
we expect restricted route topologies to reduce the cost of cover traffic
|
|
because there are fewer links to cover.
|
|
\item \emph{Better directory distribution:} Even with the threshold
|
|
directory agreement algorithm described in \ref{sec:dirservers},
|
|
the directory servers are still trust bottlenecks. We must find more
|
|
decentralized yet practical ways to distribute up-to-date snapshots of
|
|
network status without introducing new attacks.
|
|
\item \emph{Implementing location-hidden servers:} While Section
|
|
\ref{sec:rendezvous} provides a design for rendezvous points and
|
|
location-hidden servers, this feature has not yet been implemented.
|
|
We will likely encounter additional issues, both in terms of usability
|
|
and anonymity, that must be resolved.
|
|
\item \emph{Wider-scale deployment:} The original goal of Tor was to
|
|
gain experience in deploying an anonymizing overlay network, and learn
|
|
from having actual users. We are now at the point where we can start
|
|
deploying a wider network. We will see what happens!
|
|
% ok, so that's hokey. fix it. -RD
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
|
|
|
%\Section{Acknowledgments}
|
|
%% commented out for anonymous submission
|
|
|
|
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|
|
|
|
\bibliographystyle{latex8}
|
|
\bibliography{tor-design}
|
|
|
|
\end{document}
|
|
|
|
% Style guide:
|
|
% U.S. spelling
|
|
% avoid contractions (it's, can't, etc.)
|
|
% 'mix', 'mixes' (as noun)
|
|
% 'mix-net'
|
|
% 'mix', 'mixing' (as verb)
|
|
% 'Mixminion Project'
|
|
% 'Mixminion' (meaning the protocol suite or the network)
|
|
% 'Mixmaster' (meaning the protocol suite or the network)
|
|
% 'middleman' [Not with a hyphen; the hyphen has been optional
|
|
% since Middle English.]
|
|
% 'nymserver'
|
|
% 'Cypherpunk', 'Cypherpunks', 'Cypherpunk remailer'
|
|
%
|
|
% 'Whenever you are tempted to write 'Very', write 'Damn' instead, so
|
|
% your editor will take it out for you.' -- Misquoted from Mark Twain
|
|
|