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- Filename: 121-hidden-service-authentication.txt
- Title: Hidden Service Authentication
- Version: $LastChangedRevision$
- Last-Modified: $LastChangedDate$
- Author: Tobias Kamm, Thomas Lauterbach, Karsten Loesing, Ferdinand Rieger,
- Christoph Weingarten
- Created: 10-Sep-2007
- Status: Open
- Change history:
- 26-Sep-2007 Initial proposal for or-dev
- 08-Dec-2007 Incorporated comments by Nick posted to or-dev on 10-Oct-2007
- 15-Dec-2007 Rewrote complete proposal for better readability, modified
- authentication protocol, merged in personal notes
- 24-Dec-2007 Replaced misleading term "authentication" by "authorization"
- and added some clarifications (comments by Sven Kaffille)
- Overview:
- This proposal deals with a general infrastructure for performing
- authorization (not necessarily implying authentication) of requests to
- hidden services at three points: (1) when downloading and decrypting
- parts of the hidden service descriptor, (2) at the introduction point,
- and (3) at Bob's onion proxy before contacting the rendezvous point. A
- service provider will be able to restrict access to his service at these
- three points to authorized clients only. Further, the proposal contains a
- first instance of an authorization protocol for the presented
- infrastructure.
- This proposal is based on v2 hidden service descriptors as described in
- proposal 114 and introduced in version 0.2.0.10-alpha.
- The proposal is structured as follows: The next section motivates the
- integration of authorization mechanisms in the hidden service protocol.
- Then we describe a general infrastructure for authorization in hidden
- services, followed by a specific authorization protocol for this
- infrastructure. At the end we discuss a number of attacks and non-attacks
- as well as compatibility issues.
- Motivation:
- The major part of hidden services does not require client authorization
- now and won't do so in the future. To the contrary, many clients would
- not want to be (pseudonymously) identifiable by the service (which
- is unavoidable to some extend), but rather use the service
- anonymously. These services are not addressed by this proposal.
- However, there may be certain services which are intended to be accessed
- by a limited set of clients only. A possible application might be a
- wiki or forum that should only be accessible for a closed user group.
- Another, less intuitive example might be a real-time communication
- service, where someone provides a presence and messaging service only to
- his buddies. Finally, a possible application would be a personal home
- server that should be remotely accessed by its owner.
- Performing authorization for a hidden service within the Tor network, as
- proposed here, offers a range of advantages compared to allowing all
- client connections in the first instance and deferring authorization to
- the transported protocol:
- (1) Reduced traffic: Unauthorized requests would be rejected as early as
- possible, thereby reducing the overall traffic in the network generated
- by establishing circuits and sending cells.
- (2) Better protection of service location: Unauthorized clients could not
- force Bob to create circuits to their rendezvous points, thus preventing
- the attack described by Øverlier and Syverson in their paper "Locating
- Hidden Servers" even without the need for guards.
- (3) Hiding activity: Apart from performing the actual authorization, a
- service provider could also hide the mere presence of his service from
- unauthorized clients when not providing hidden service descriptors to
- them and rejecting unauthorized requests already at the introduction
- point (ideally without leaking presence information at any of these
- points).
- (4) Better protection of introduction points: When providing hidden
- service descriptors to authorized clients only and encrypting the
- introduction points as described in proposal 114, the introduction points
- would be unknown to unauthorized clients and thereby protected from DoS
- attacks.
- (5) Protocol independence: Authorization could be performed for all
- transported protocols, regardless of their own capabilities to do so.
- (6) Ease of administration: A service provider running multiple hidden
- services would be able to configure access at a single place uniformly
- instead of doing so for all services separately.
- (7) Optional QoS support: Bob could adapt his node selection algorithm
- for building the circuit to Alice's rendezvous point depending on a
- previously guaranteed QoS level, thus providing better latency or
- bandwidth for selected clients.
- As a disadvantage of performing authorization within the Tor network can
- be seen that a hidden service cannot make use of authorization data in
- the transported protocol. Tor hidden services were designed to be
- independent of the transported protocol. Therefore it's only possible to
- either grant or deny access to the whole service, but not to specific
- resources of the service.
- Authorization often implies authentication, i.e. proving one's identity.
- However, when performing authorization within the Tor network, untrusted
- points should not gain any useful information about the identities of
- communicating parties, neither server nor client. A crucial challenge is
- to remain anonymous towards directory servers and introduction points.
- However, trying to hide identity from the hidden service is a futile
- task, because a client would never know if he is the only authorized
- client and therefore perfectly identifiable. Therefore, hiding identity
- from the hidden service is not aimed by this proposal.
- The current implementation of hidden services does not provide any kind
- of authorization. The hidden service descriptor version 2, introduced by
- proposal 114, was designed to use a descriptor cookie for downloading and
- decrypting parts of the descriptor content, but this feature is not yet
- in use. Further, most relevant cell formats specified in rend-spec
- contain fields for authorization data, but those fields are neither
- implemented nor do they suffice entirely.
- Details:
- 1 General infrastructure for authorization to hidden services
- We spotted three possible authorization points in the hidden service
- protocol:
- (1) when downloading and decrypting parts of the hidden service
- descriptor,
- (2) at the introduction point, and
- (3) at Bob's onion proxy before contacting the rendezvous point.
- The general idea of this proposal is to allow service providers to
- restrict access to all of these points to authorized clients only.
- 1.1 Client authorization at directory
- Since the implementation of proposal 114 it is possible to combine a
- hidden service descriptor with a so-called descriptor cookie. If done so,
- the descriptor cookie becomes part of the descriptor ID, thus having an
- effect on the storage location of the descriptor. Someone who has learned
- about a service, but is not aware of the descriptor cookie, won't be able
- to determine the descriptor ID and download the current hidden service
- descriptor; he won't even know whether the service has uploaded a
- descriptor recently. Descriptor IDs are calculated as follows (see
- section 1.2 of rend-spec for the complete specification of v2 hidden
- service descriptors):
- descriptor-id =
- H(permanent-id | H(time-period | descriptor-cookie | replica))
- The second purpose of the descriptor cookie is to encrypt the list of
- introduction points, including optional authorization data. Hence, the
- hidden service directories won't learn any introduction information from
- storing a hidden service descriptor. This feature is implemented but
- unused at the moment, so that this proposal will harness the advantages
- of proposal 114.
- The descriptor cookie can be used for authorization by keeping it secret
- from everyone but authorized clients. A service could then decide whether
- to publish hidden service descriptors using that descriptor cookie later
- on. An authorized client being aware of the descriptor cookie would be
- able to download and decrypt the hidden service descriptor.
- The number of concurrently used descriptor cookies for one hidden service
- is not restricted. A service could use a single descriptor cookie for all
- users, a distinct cookie per user, or something in between, like one
- cookie per group of users. It is up to the specific protocol and how it
- is applied by a service provider. However, we advise to use a small
- number of descriptor cookies for efficiency reasons and for improving the
- ability to hide presence of a service (see security implications at the
- end of this document).
- Although this part of the proposal is meant to describe a general
- infrastructure for authorization, changing the way of using the
- descriptor cookie to look up hidden service descriptors, e.g. applying
- some sort of asymmetric crypto system, would require in-depth changes
- that would be incompatible to v2 hidden service descriptors. On the
- contrary, using another key for en-/decrypting the introduction point
- part of a hidden service descriptor, e.g. a different symmetric key or
- asymmetric encryption, would be easy to implement and compatible to v2
- hidden service descriptors as understood by hidden service directories
- (clients and servers would have to be upgraded anyway for using the new
- features).
- 1.2 Client authorization at introduction point
- The next possible authorization point after downloading and decrypting
- a hidden service descriptor is the introduction point. It is important
- for authorization, because it bears the last chance of hiding presence
- of a hidden service from unauthorized clients. Further, performing
- authorization at the introduction point might reduce traffic in the
- network, because unauthorized requests would not be passed to the
- hidden service. This applies to those clients who are aware of a
- descriptor cookie and thereby of the hidden service descriptor, but do
- not have authorization data to pass the introduction point or access the
- service (such a situation might occur when authorization data for
- authorization at the directory is not issued on a per-user base as
- opposed to authorization data for authorization at the introduction
- point).
- It is important to note that the introduction point must be considered
- untrustworthy, and therefore cannot replace authorization at the hidden
- service itself. Nor should the introduction point learn any sensitive
- identifiable information from either server or client.
- In order to perform authorization at the introduction point, three
- message formats need to be modified: (1) v2 hidden service descriptors,
- (2) ESTABLISH_INTRO cells, and (3) INTRODUCE1 cells.
- A v2 hidden service descriptor needs to contain authorization data that
- is introduction-point-specific and sometimes also authorization data
- that is introduction-point-independent. Therefore, v2 hidden service
- descriptors as specified in section 1.2 of rend-spec already contain two
- reserved fields "intro-authorization" and "service-authorization"
- (originally, the names of these fields were "...-authentication")
- containing an authorization type number and arbitrary authorization
- data. We propose that authorization data consists of base64 encoded
- objects of arbitrary length, surrounded by "-----BEGIN MESSAGE-----" and
- "-----END MESSAGE-----". This will increase the size of hidden service
- descriptors, which however is possible, as there is no strict upper
- limit.
- The current ESTABLISH_INTRO cells as described in section 1.3 of
- rend-spec don't contain either authorization data or version
- information. Therefore, we propose a new version 1 of the ESTABLISH_INTRO
- cells adding these two issues as follows:
- V Format byte: set to 255 [1 octet]
- V Version byte: set to 1 [1 octet]
- KL Key length [2 octets]
- PK Bob's public key [KL octets]
- HS Hash of session info [20 octets]
- AUTHT The auth type that is supported [1 octet]
- AUTHL Length of auth data [2 octets]
- AUTHD Auth data [variable]
- SIG Signature of above information [variable]
- From the format it is possible to determine the maximum allowed size for
- authorization data: given the fact that cells are 512 octets long, of
- which 498 octets are usable (see section 6.1 of tor-spec), and assuming
- 1024 bit = 128 octet long keys, there are 215 octets left for
- authorization data. Hence, authorization protocols are bound to use no
- more than these 215 octets, regardless of the number of clients that
- shall be authenticated at the introduction point. Otherwise, one would
- need to send multiple ESTABLISH_INTRO cells or split them up, what we do
- not specify here.
- In order to understand a v1 ESTABLISH_INTRO cell, the implementation of
- a relay must have a certain Tor version, which would probably be some
- 0.2.1.x. Hidden services need to be able to distinguish relays being
- capable of understanding the new v1 cell formats and perform
- authorization. We propose to use the version number that is contained in
- networkstatus documents to find capable introduction points.
- The current INTRODUCE1 cells as described in section 1.8 of rend-spec is
- not designed to carry authorization data and has no version number, too.
- We propose the following version 1 of INTRODUCE1 cells:
- Cleartext
- V Version byte: set to 1 [1 octet]
- PK_ID Identifier for Bob's PK [20 octets]
- AUTHT The auth type that is supported [1 octet]
- AUTHL Length of auth data [2 octets]
- AUTHD Auth data [variable]
- Encrypted to Bob's PK:
- (RELAY_INTRODUCE2 cell)
- The maximum length of contained authorization data depends on the length
- of the contained INTRODUCE2 cell. A calculation follows below when
- describing the INTRODUCE2 cell format we propose to use.
- Unfortunately, v0 INTRODUCE1 cells consist only of a fixed-size,
- seemingly random PK_ID, followed by the encrypted INTRODUCE2 cell. This
- makes it impossible to distinguish v0 INTRODUCE1 cells from any later
- format. In particular, it is not possible to introduce some kind of
- format and version byte for newer versions of this cell. That's probably
- where the comment "[XXX011 want to put intro-level auth info here, but no
- version. crap. -RD]" that was part of rend-spec some time ago comes from.
- Processing of v1 INTRODUCE1 cells therefore requires knowledge about the
- context in which they are used. As a result, we propose that when
- receiving a v1 ESTABLISH_INTRO cell, an introduction point only accepts
- v1 INTRODUCE1 cells later on. Hence, the same introduction point cannot
- be used to accept both v0 and v1 INTRODUCE1 cells for the same service.
- (Another solution would be to distinguish v0 and v1 INTRODUCE1 cells by
- their size, as v0 INTRODUCE1 cells can only have specific cell sizes,
- depending on the version of the contained INTRODUCE2 cell; however, this
- approach does not appear very clean.)
- 1.3 Client authorization at hidden service
- The time when a hidden service receives an INTRODUCE2 cell constitutes
- the last possible authorization point during the hidden service
- protocol. Performing authorization here is easier than at the other two
- authorization points, because there are no possibly untrusted entities
- involved.
- In general, a client that is successfully authorized at the introduction
- point should be granted access at the hidden service, too. Otherwise, the
- client would receive a positive INTRODUCE_ACK cell from the introduction
- point and conclude that it may connect to the service, but the request
- will be dropped without notice. This would appear as a failure to
- clients. Therefore, the number of cases in which a client successfully
- passes the introduction point, but fails at the hidden service should be
- zero. However, this does not lead to the conclusion, that the
- authorization data used at the introduction point and the hidden service
- must be the same, but only that both authorization data should lead to
- the same authorization result.
- Authorization data is transmitted from client to server via an
- INTRODUCE2 cell that is forwarded by the introduction point. There are
- versions 0 to 2 specified in section 1.8 of rend-spec, but none of these
- contains fields for carrying authorization data. We propose a slightly
- modified version of v3 INTRODUCE2 cells that is specified in section
- 1.8.1 and which is not implemented as of December 2007. The only change
- is to switch the lengths of AUTHT and AUTHL, which we assume to be a typo
- in current rend-spec. The proposed format of v3 INTRODUCE2 cells is as
- follows:
- VER Version byte: set to 3. [1 octet]
- ATYPE An address type (typically 4) [1 octet]
- ADDR Rendezvous point's IP address [4 or 16 octets]
- PORT Rendezvous point's OR port [2 octets]
- AUTHT The auth type that is supported [1 octet]
- AUTHL Length of auth data [2 octets]
- AUTHD Auth data [variable]
- ID Rendezvous point identity ID [20 octets]
- KLEN Length of onion key [2 octets]
- KEY Rendezvous point onion key [KLEN octets]
- RC Rendezvous cookie [20 octets]
- g^x Diffie-Hellman data, part 1 [128 octets]
- The maximum possible length of authorization data is related to the
- enclosing INTRODUCE1 cell. A v3 INTRODUCE2 cell with IPv6 address and
- 1024 bit = 128 octets long public keys without any authorization data
- occupies 321 octets, plus 58 octets for hybrid public key encryption (see
- section 5.1 of tor-spec on hybrid encryption of CREATE cells). The
- surrounding v1 INTRODUCE1 cell requires 24 octets. This leaves only 95
- of the 498 available octets free, which must be shared between
- authorization data to the introduction point _and_ to the hidden
- service.
- When receiving a v3 INTRODUCE2 cell, Bob checks whether a client has
- provided valid authorization data to him. He will only then build a
- circuit to the provided rendezvous point and otherwise will drop the
- cell.
- There might be several attacks based on the idea of replaying existing
- cells to the hidden service. In particular, someone (the introduction
- point or an evil authenticated client) might replay valid INTRODUCE2
- cells to make the hidden service build an arbitrary number of circuits to
- (maybe long gone) rendezvous points. Therefore, we propose that hidden
- services maintain a history of received INTRODUCE2 cells within the last
- hour and only accept INTRODUCE2 cells matching the following rules:
- (1) a maximum of 3 cells coming from the same client and containing the
- same rendezvous cookie, and
- (2) a maximum of 10 cells coming from the same client with different
- rendezvous cookies.
- This allows a client to retry connection establishment using the same
- rendezvous point for 3 times and a total number of 10 connection
- establishments (not requests in the transported protocol) per hour.
- 1.4 Summary of authorization data fields
- In summary, the proposed descriptor format and cell formats provide the
- following fields for carrying authorization data:
- (1) The v2 hidden service descriptor contains:
- - a descriptor cookie that is used for the lookup process, and
- - an arbitrary encryption schema to ensure authorization to access
- introduction information (currently symmetric encryption with the
- descriptor cookie).
- (2) For performing authorization at the introduction point we can use:
- - the fields intro-authorization and service-authorization in
- hidden service descriptors,
- - a maximum of 215 octets in the ESTABLISH_INTRO cell, and
- - one part of 95 octets in the INTRODUCE1 cell.
- (3) For performing authorization at the hidden service we can use:
- - the fields intro-authorization and service-authorization in
- hidden service descriptors,
- - the other part of 95 octets in the INTRODUCE2 cell.
- It will also still be possible to access a hidden service without any
- authorization or only use a part of the authorization infrastructure.
- However, this requires to consider all parts of the infrastructure. For
- example, authorization at the introduction point relying on confidential
- intro-authorization data transported in the hidden service descriptor
- cannot be performed without using an encryption schema for introduction
- information.
- 1.5 Managing authorization data at servers and clients
- In order to provide authorization data at the hidden server and the
- authenticated clients, we propose to use files---either the tor
- configuration file or separate files. In the latter case a hidden server
- would use one file per provided service, and a client would use one file
- per server she wants to access. The exact format of these special files
- depends on the authorization protocol used.
- Currently, rend-spec contains the proposition to encode client-side
- authorization data in the URL, like in x.y.z.onion. This was never used
- and is also a bad idea, because in case of HTTP the requested URL may be
- contained in the Host and Referer fields.
- 2 An authorization protocol based on group and user passwords
- In the following we discuss an authorization protocol for the proposed
- authorization architecture that performs authorization at all three
- proposed authorization points. The protocol relies on two symmetrically
- shared keys: a group key and a user key. The reason for this separation
- as compared to using a single key for each user is the fact that the
- number of descriptor cookies should be limited, so that the group key
- will be used for authenticating at the directory, whereas two keys
- derived from the user key will be used for performing authorization at
- the introduction and the hidden service.
- 2.1 Client authorization at directory
- The server creates groups of users that shall be able to access his
- service. He provides all users of a certain group with the same group key
- which is a password of arbitrary length.
- The group key is used as input to derive a 128 bit descriptor cookie from
- it. We propose to apply a secure hash function and use the first 128 bits
- of output:
- descriptor-cookie = H(group-key)
- Hence, there will be a distinct hidden service descriptor for every group
- of users. All descriptors contain the same introduction points and the
- authorization data required by the users of the given group. Whenever a
- server decides to remove authorization for a group, he can simply stop
- publishing hidden service descriptors using the descriptor cookie.
- 2.2 Client authorization at introduction point
- The idea for authenticating at the introduction point is borrowed from
- authorization at the rendezvous point using a rendezvous cookie. A
- rendezvous cookie is created by the client and encrypted for the server
- in order to authenticate the server at the rendezvous point. Likewise,
- the so-called introduction cookie is created by the server and encrypted
- for the client in order to authenticate the client at the introduction
- point.
- More precise, the server creates a new introduction cookie when
- establishing an introduction point and includes it in the ESTABLISH_INTRO
- cell that it sends to the introduction point. This introduction cookie
- will be used by all clients during the complete time of using this
- introduction point. The server then encrypts the introduction cookie for
- all authorized clients (as described in the next paragraph) and includes
- it in the introduction-point-specific part of the hidden service
- descriptor. A client reads and decrypts the introduction cookie from the
- hidden service descriptor and includes it in the INTRODUCE1 cell that it
- sends to the introduction point. The introduction point can then compare
- the introduction cookie included in the INTRODUCE1 cell with the value
- that it previously received in the ESTABLISH_INTRO cell. If both values
- match, the introduction point passes the INTRODUCE2 cell to the hidden
- service.
- For the sake of simplicity, the size of an introduction cookie should be
- only 16 bytes so that they can be encrypted using AES-128 without using
- a block mode. Although rendezvous cookies are 20 bytes long, the 16 bytes
- of an introduction cookie should still provide similar, or at least
- sufficient security.
- Encryption of the introduction cookie is done on a per user base. Every
- client shares a password of arbitrary length with the server, which is
- the so-called user key. The server derives a symmetric key from the
- client's user key by applying a secure hash function and using the first
- 128 bits of output as follows:
- encryption-key = H(user-key | "INTRO")
- It is important that the encryption key does not allow any inference on
- the user key, because the latter will also be used for authorization at
- the hidden service. This is ensured by applying the secure one-way
- function H.
- The 16 bytes long, symmetrically encrypted introduction cookies are
- encoded in binary form in the authorization data object of a hidden
- service descriptor. Additionally, for every client there is a 20 byte
- long client identifier that is also derived from the user key, so that
- the client can identify which value to decrypt. The client identifier is
- determined as follows:
- client-id = H(user-key | "CLIENT")
- The authorization data encoded to the hidden service descriptor consists
- of the concatenation of pairs consisting of 20 byte client identifiers
- and 16 byte encrypted introduction cookies. The authorization type
- number for the encrypted introduction cookies as well as for
- ESTABLISH_INTRO and INTRODUCE1 cells is "1".
- 2.3 Client authorization at hidden service
- Authorization at the hidden service also makes use of the user key,
- because whoever is authorized to pass the introduction point shall be
- authorized to access the hidden service. Therefore, the server and client
- derive a common value from the user key, which is called service cookie
- and which is 20 bytes long:
- service-cookie = H(user-key | "SERVICE")
- The client is supposed to include this service cookie, preceded by the 20
- bytes long client ID, in INTRODUCE2 cells that it sends to the server.
- The server compares authorization data of incoming INTRODUCE2 cells with
- the locally stored value that it would expect. The authorization type
- number of this protocol for INTRODUCE2 cells is "1".
- Passing a derived value of a client's user key will make clients
- identifiable to the hidden service. Although there might be ways to limit
- identifiability, an authorized client can never be sure that he stays
- anonymous to the hidden service. For example, if we created a service
- cookie that is the same for all users and encrypted it for all users, and
- if we further included a checksum of this service cookie in the
- descriptor to prove that all users have the same value, a client would
- never know if he is the only valid user contained in this descriptor,
- with the other users only be fakes created by the hidden service.
- Therefore, we did not make attempts to hide a client's identity from a
- hidden service. Another reason was that we would not be able to apply a
- connection limit of 10 requests per hour and user that helps prevent some
- threats.
- 2.4 Providing authorization data
- The authorization data that needs to be provided by servers consists of
- a number of group keys, each having a number of user keys assigned. These
- data items could be provided by two new configuration options
- "HiddenServiceAuthGroup group-name group-key" and "HiddenServiceAuthUser
- user-name user-key" with the semantics that a group contains all users
- directly following the group key definition and before reaching the next
- group key definition for a hidden service.
- On client side, authorization data also consists of a group and a user
- key. Therefore, a new configuration option "HiddenServiceAuthClient
- onion-address group-key user-key" could be introduced that could be
- written to any place in the configuration file. Whenever the user would
- try to access the given onion address, the given group and user key
- would be used for authorization.
- Security implications:
- In the following we want to discuss attacks and non-attacks by dishonest
- entities in the presented infrastructure and specific protocol. These
- security implications would have to be verified once more when adding
- another protocol. The dishonest entities (theoretically) include the
- hidden server itself, the authenticated clients, hidden service directory
- nodes, introduction points, and rendezvous points. The relays that are
- part of circuits used during protocol execution, but never learn about
- the exchanged descriptors or cells by design, are not considered.
- Obviously, this list makes no claim to be complete. The discussed attacks
- are sorted by the difficulty to perform them, in ascending order,
- starting with roles that everyone could attempt to take and ending with
- partially trusted entities abusing the trust put in them.
- (1) A hidden service directory could attempt to conclude presence of a
- server from the existence of a locally stored hidden service descriptor:
- This passive attack is possible, because descriptors need to contain a
- publicly visible signature of the server (see proposal 114 for a more
- extensive discussion of the v2 descriptor format). A possible protection
- would be to reduce the number of concurrently used descriptor cookies and
- increase the number of hidden service directories in the network.
- (2) A hidden service directory could try to break the descriptor cookies
- of locally stored descriptors: This attack can be performed offline. The
- only useful countermeasure against it might be using safe passwords that
- are generated by Tor.
- (3) An introduction point could try to identify the pseudonym of the
- hidden service on behalf of which it operates: This is impossible by
- design, because the service uses a fresh public key for every
- establishment of an introduction point (see proposal 114) and the
- introduction point receives a fresh introduction cookie, so that there is
- no identifiable information about the service that the introduction point
- could learn. The introduction point cannot even tell if client accesses
- belong to the same client or not, nor can it know the total number of
- authorized clients. The only information might be the pattern of
- anonymous client accesses, but that is hardly enough to reliably identify
- a specific server.
- (4) An introduction point could want to learn the identities of accessing
- clients: This is also impossible by design, because all clients use the
- same introduction cookie for authorization at the introduction point.
- (5) An introduction point could try to replay a correct INTRODUCE1 cell
- to other introduction points of the same service, e.g. in order to force
- the service to create a huge number of useless circuits: This attack is
- not possible by design, because INTRODUCE1 cells need to contain an
- introduction cookie that is different for every introduction point.
- (6) An introduction point could attempt to replay a correct INTRODUCE2
- cell to the hidden service, e.g. for the same reason as in the last
- attack: This attack is very limited by the fact that a server will only
- accept 3 INTRODUCE2 cells containing the same rendezvous cookie and drop
- all further replayed cells.
- (7) An introduction point could block client requests by sending either
- positive or negative INTRODUCE_ACK cells back to the client, but without
- forwarding INTRODUCE2 cells to the server: This attack is an annoyance
- for clients, because they might wait for a timeout to elapse until trying
- another introduction point. However, this attack is not introduced by
- performing authorization and it cannot be targeted towards a specific
- client. A countermeasure might be for the server to periodically perform
- introduction requests to his own service to see if introduction points
- are working correctly.
- (8) The rendezvous point could attempt to identify either server or
- client: No, this remains impossible as it was before, because the
- rendezvous cookie does not contain any identifiable information.
- (9) An authenticated client could try to break the encryption keys of the
- other authenticated clients that have their introduction cookies
- encrypted in the hidden service descriptor: This known-plaintext attack
- can be performed offline. The only useful countermeasure against it could
- be safe passwords that are generated by Tor. However, the attack would
- not be very useful as long as encryption keys do not reveal information
- on the contained user key.
- (10) An authenticated client could swamp the server with valid INTRODUCE1
- and INTRODUCE2 cells, e.g. in order to force the service to create
- useless circuits to rendezvous points; as opposed to an introduction
- point replaying the same INTRODUCE2 cell, a client could include a new
- rendezvous cookie for every request: The countermeasure for this attack
- is the restriction to 10 connection establishments per client and hour.
- (11) An authenticated client could attempt to break the service cookie of
- another authenticated client to obtain access at the hidden service: This
- requires a brute-force online attack. There are no countermeasures
- provided, but the question arises whether the outcome of this attack is
- worth the cost. The service cookie from one authenticated client is as
- good as from another, with the only exception of possible better QoS
- properties of certain clients.
- Compatibility:
- An implementation of this proposal would require changes to hidden
- servers and clients to process authorization data and encode and
- understand the new formats. However, both servers and clients would
- remain compatible to regular hidden services without authorization.
- Further, the implementation of introduction points would have to be
- changed, so that they understand the new cell versions and perform
- authorization. But again, the new introduction points would remain
- compatible to the existing hidden service protocol.
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