tor/doc/spec/proposals/ideas/xxx-bridge-disbursement.txt
2008-08-03 15:34:28 +00:00

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How to hand out bridges.
Divide bridges into 'strategies' as they come in. Do this uniformly
at random for now.
For each strategy, we'll hand out bridges in a different way to
clients. This document describes two strategies: email-based and
IP-based.
0. Notation:
HMAC(k,v) : an HMAC of v using the key k.
A|B: The string A concatenated with the string B.
1. Email-based.
Goal: bootstrap based on one or more popular email service's sybil
prevention algorithms.
Parameters:
HMAC -- an HMAC function
P -- a time period
K -- the number of bridges to send in a period.
Setup: Generate two nonces, N and M.
As bridges arrive, put them into a ring according to HMAC(N,ID)
where ID is the bridges's identity digest.
Divide time into divisions of length P.
When we get an email:
If it's not from a supported email service, reject it.
If we already sent a response to that email address (normalized)
in this period, send _exactly_ the same response.
If it is from a supported service, generate X = HMAC(M,PS|E) where E
is the lowercased normalized email address for the user, and
where PS is the start of the currrent period. Send
the first K bridges in the ring after point X.
[If we want to make sure that repeat queries are given exactly the
same results, then we can't let the ring change during the
time period. For a long time period like a month, that's quite a
hassle. How about instead just keeping a replay cache of addresses
that have been answered, and sending them a "sorry, you already got
your addresses for the time period; perhaps you should try these
other fine distribution strategies while you wait?" response? This
approach would also resolve the "Make sure you can't construct a
distinct address to match an existing one" note below. -RD]
[I think, if we get a replay, we need to send back the same
answer as we did the first time, not say "try again."
Otherwise we need to worry that an attacker can keep people
from getting bridges by preemtively asking for them,
or that an attacker may force them to prove they haven't
gotten any bridges by asking. -NM]
[While we're at it, if we do the replay cache thing and don't need
repeatable answers, we could just pick K random answers from the
pool. Is it beneficial that a bridge user who knows about a clump of
nodes will be sharing them with other users who know about a similar
(overlapping) clump? One good aspect is against an adversary who
learns about a clump this way and watches those bridges to learn
other users and discover *their* bridges: he doesn't learn about
as many new bridges as he might if they were randomly distributed.
A drawback is against an adversary who happens to pick two email
addresses in P that include overlapping answers: he can measure
the difference in clumps and estimate how quickly the bridge pool
is growing. -RD]
[Random is one more darn thing to implement; rings are already
there. -NM]
[If we make the period P be mailbox-specific, and make it a random
value around some mean, then we make it harder for an attacker to
know when to try using his small army of gmail addresses to gather
another harvest. But we also make it harder for users to know when
they can try again. -RD]
[Letting the users know about when they can try again seems
worthwhile. Otherwise users and attackers will all probe and
probe and probe until they get an answer. No additional
security will be achieved, but bandwidth will be lost. -NM]
To normalize an email address:
Start with the RFC822 address. Consider only the mailbox {???}
portion of the address (username@domain). Put this into lowercase
ascii.
Questions:
What to do with weird character encodings? Look up the RFC.
Notes:
Make sure that you can't force a single email address to appear
in lots of different ways. IOW, if nickm@freehaven.net and
NICKM@freehaven.net aren't treated the same, then I can get lots
more bridges than I should.
Make sure you can't construct a distinct address to match an
existing one. IOW, if we treat nickm@X and nickm@Y as the same
user, then anybody can register nickm@Z and use it to tell which
bridges nickm@X got (or would get).
Make sure that we actually check headers so we can't be trivially
used to spam people.
2. IP-based.
Goal: avoid handing out all the bridges to users in a similar IP
space and time.
Parameters:
T_Flush -- how long it should take a user on a single network to
see a whole cluster of bridges.
N_C
K -- the number of bridges we hand out in response to a single
request.
Setup: using an AS map or a geoip map or some other flawed input
source, divide IP space into "areas" such that surveying a large
collection of "areas" is hard. For v0, use /24 address blocks.
Group areas into N_C clusters.
Generate secrets L, M, N.
Set the period P such that P*(bridges-per-cluster/K) = T_flush.
Don't set P to greater than a week, or less than three hours.
When we get a bridge:
Based on HMAC(L,ID), assign the bridge to a cluster. Within each
cluster, keep the bridges in a ring based on HMAC(M,ID).
[Should we re-sort the rings for each new time period, so the ring
for a given cluster is based on HMAC(M,PS|ID)? -RD]
When we get a connection:
If it's http, redirect it to https.
Let area be the incoming IP network. Let PS be the current
period. Compute X = HMAC(N, PS|area). Return the next K bridges
in the ring after X.
[Don't we want to compute C = HMAC(key, area) to learn what cluster
to answer from, and then X = HMAC(key, PS|area) to pick a point in
that ring? -RD]
Need to clarify that some HMACs are for rings, and some are for
partitions. How rings scale is clear. How do we grow the number of
partitions? Looking at successive bits from the HMAC output is one way.
3. Open issues
Denial of service attacks
A good view of network topology
at some point we should learn some reliability stats on our bridges. when
we say above 'give out k bridges', we might give out 2 reliable ones and
k-2 others. we count around the ring the same way we do now, to find them.