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149 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
149 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
Filename: 131-verify-tor-usage.txt
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Title: Help users to verify they are using Tor
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Author: Steven J. Murdoch
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Created: 2008-01-25
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Status: Needs-Revision
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Overview:
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Websites for checking whether a user is accessing them via Tor are a
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very helpful aid to configuring web browsers correctly. Existing
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solutions have both false positives and false negatives when
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checking if Tor is being used. This proposal will discuss how to
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modify Tor so as to make testing more reliable.
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Motivation:
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Currently deployed websites for detecting Tor use work by comparing
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the client IP address for a request with a list of known Tor nodes.
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This approach is generally effective, but suffers from both false
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positives and false negatives.
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If a user has a Tor exit node installed, or just happens to have
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been allocated an IP address previously used by a Tor exit node, any
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web requests will be incorrectly flagged as coming from Tor. If any
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customer of an ISP which implements a transparent proxy runs an exit
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node, all other users of the ISP will be flagged as Tor users.
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Conversely, if the exit node chosen by a Tor user has not yet been
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recorded by the Tor checking website, requests will be incorrectly
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flagged as not coming via Tor.
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The only reliable way to tell whether Tor is being used or not is for
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the Tor client to flag this to the browser.
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Proposal:
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A DNS name should be registered and point to an IP address
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controlled by the Tor project and likely to remain so for the
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useful lifetime of a Tor client. A web server should be placed
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at this IP address.
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Tor should be modified to treat requests to port 80, at the
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specified DNS name or IP address specially. Instead of opening a
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circuit, it should respond to a HTTP request with a helpful web
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page:
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- If the request to open a connection was to the domain name, the web
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page should state that Tor is working properly.
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- If the request was to the IP address, the web page should state
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that there is a DNS-leakage vulnerability.
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If the request goes through to the real web server, the page
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should state that Tor has not been set up properly.
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Extensions:
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Identifying proxy server:
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If needed, other applications between the web browser and Tor (e.g.
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Polipo and Privoxy) could piggyback on the same mechanism to flag
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whether they are in use. All three possible web pages should include
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a machine-readable placeholder, into which another program could
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insert their own message.
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For example, the webpage returned by Tor to indicate a successful
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configuration could include the following HTML:
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<h2>Connection chain</h2>
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<ul>
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<li>Tor 0.1.2.14-alpha</li>
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<!-- Tor Connectivity Check: success -->
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</ul>
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When the proxy server observes this string, in response to a request
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for the Tor connectivity check web page, it would prepend it's own
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message, resulting in the following being returned to the web
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browser:
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<h2>Connection chain
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<ul>
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<li>Tor 0.1.2.14-alpha</li>
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<li>Polipo version 1.0.4</li>
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<!-- Tor Connectivity Check: success -->
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</ul>
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Checking external connectivity:
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If Tor intercepts a request, and returns a response itself, the user
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will not actually confirm whether Tor is able to build a successful
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circuit. It may then be advantageous to include an image in the web
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page which is loaded from a different domain. If this is able to be
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loaded then the user will know that external connectivity through
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Tor works.
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Automatic Firefox Notification:
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All forms of the website should return valid XHTML and have a
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hidden link with an id attribute "TorCheckResult" and a target
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property that can be queried to determine the result. For example,
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a hidden link would convey success like this:
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<a id="TorCheckResult" target="success" href="/"></a>
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failure like this:
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<a id="TorCheckResult" target="failure" href="/"></a>
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and DNS leaks like this:
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<a id="TorCheckResult" target="dnsleak" href="/"></a>
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Firefox extensions such as Torbutton would then be able to
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issue an XMLHttpRequest for the page and query the result
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with resultXML.getElementById("TorCheckResult").target
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to automatically report the Tor status to the user when
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they first attempt to enable Tor activity, or whenever
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they request a check from the extension preferences window.
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If the check website is to be themed with heavy graphics and/or
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extensive documentation, the check result itself should be
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contained in a seperate lightweight iframe that extensions can
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request via an alternate url.
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Security and resiliency implications:
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What attacks are possible?
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If the IP address used for this feature moves there will be two
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consequences:
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- A new website at this IP address will remain inaccessible over
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Tor
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- Tor users who are leaking DNS will be informed that Tor is not
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working, rather than that it is active but leaking DNS
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We should thus attempt to find an IP address which we reasonably
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believe can remain static.
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Open issues:
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If a Tor version which does not support this extra feature is used,
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the webpage returned will indicate that Tor is not being used. Can
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this be safely fixed?
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Related work:
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The proposed mechanism is very similar to config.privoxy.org. The
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most significant difference is that if the web browser is
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misconfigured, Tor will only get an IP address. Even in this case,
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Tor should be able to respond with a webpage to notify the user of how
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to fix the problem. This also implies that Tor must be told of the
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special IP address, and so must be effectively permanent.
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