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- \begin{document}
- \title{Design of a blocking-resistant anonymity system}
- \author{Roger Dingledine\inst{1} \and
- Nick Mathewson\inst{1}}
- \institute{The Free Haven Project \email{<\{arma,nickm\}@freehaven.net>}}
- \maketitle
- \pagestyle{plain}
- \begin{abstract}
- Websites around the world are increasingly being blocked by
- government-level firewalls. Many people use anonymizing networks like
- Tor to contact sites without letting an attacker trace their activities,
- and as an added benefit they are no longer affected by local censorship.
- But if the attacker simply denies access to the Tor network itself,
- blocked users can no longer benefit from the security Tor offers.
- Here we describe a design that builds upon the current Tor network
- to provide an anonymizing network that resists blocking
- by government-level attackers.
- \end{abstract}
- \section{Introduction and Goals}
- Anonymizing networks such as Tor~\cite{tor-design} bounce traffic around
- a network of relays. They aim to hide not only what is being said, but
- also who is communicating with whom, which users are using which websites,
- and so on. These systems have a broad range of users, including ordinary
- citizens who want to avoid being profiled for targeted advertisements,
- corporations who don't want to reveal information to their competitors,
- and law enforcement and government intelligence agencies who need to do
- operations on the Internet without being noticed.
- Historically, research on anonymizing systems has assumed a passive
- attacker who monitors the user (named Alice) and tries to discover her
- activities, yet lets her reach any piece of the network. In more modern
- threat models such as Tor's, the adversary is allowed to perform active
- attacks such as modifying communications in hopes of tricking Alice
- into revealing her destination, or intercepting some of her connections
- to run a man-in-the-middle attack. But these systems still assume that
- Alice can eventually reach the anonymizing network.
- An increasing number of users are making use of the Tor software not
- so much for its anonymity properties but for its censorship resistance
- properties -- if they access Internet sites like Wikipedia and Blogspot
- via Tor, they are no longer affected by local censorship and firewall
- rules. In fact, an informal user study showed China as the third largest
- user base for Tor clients~\cite{geoip-tor}, with tens of thousands of
- people accessing the Tor network from China each day.
- The current Tor design is easy to block if the attacker controls Alice's
- connection to the Tor network -- by blocking the directory authorities,
- by blocking all the server IP addresses in the directory, or by filtering
- based on the signature of the Tor TLS handshake. Here we describe a
- design that builds upon the current Tor network to provide an anonymizing
- network that also resists this blocking.
- %And adding more different classes of users and goals to the Tor network
- %improves the anonymity for all Tor users~\cite{econymics,tor-weis06}.
- \section{Adversary assumptions}
- \label{sec:adversary}
- The history of blocking-resistance designs is littered with all sorts
- of conflicting assumptions about what adversaries to expect and what
- problems are in the critical path to a solution. Here we try to enumerate
- our best understanding of the current situation around the world.
- In the traditional security style, we aim to describe a strong attacker
- -- if we can defend against it, we inherit protection against weaker
- attackers as well. After all, we want a general design that will
- work for people in China, people in Iran, people in Thailand, people
- in firewalled corporate networks who can't get out to whistleblow,
- and people in whatever the next oppressive situation is. In fact, by
- designing with a variety of adversaries in mind, we can actually take
- advantage of the fact that adversaries will be in different stages of
- the arms race at each location.
- We assume there are three main network attacks by censors
- currently~\cite{clayton:pet2006}:
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item Block destination by automatically searching for certain strings
- in TCP packets.
- \item Block destination by manually listing its IP address at the
- firewall.
- \item Intercept DNS requests and give bogus responses for certain
- destination hostnames.
- \end{tightlist}
- We assume the network firewall has very limited CPU per
- connection~\cite{clayton:pet2006}. Against an adversary who spends
- hours looking through the contents of each packet, we would need
- some stronger mechanism such as steganography, which introduces its
- own problems~\cite{active-wardens,foo,bar}.
- We assume that readers of blocked content will not be punished much,
- relative to publishers. So far in places like China, the authorities
- mainly go after people who publish materials and coordinate organized
- movements against the state. If they find that a user happens to be
- reading a site that should be blocked, the typical response is simply
- to block the site. Of course, even with an encrypted connection,
- the adversary can observe whether Alice is mostly downloading
- bytes or mostly uploading them -- we discuss this issue more in
- Section~\ref{subsec:upload-padding}.
- We assume that while various different adversaries can coordinate and share
- notes, there will be a significant time lag between one attacker learning
- how to overcome a facet of our design and other attackers picking it up.
- (Corollary: in the early stages of deployment, the insider threat isn't
- as high of a risk.)
- We assume that our users have control over their hardware and
- software -- they don't have any spyware installed, there are no
- cameras watching their screen, etc. Unfortunately, in many situations
- such attackers are very real~\cite{zuckerman-threatmodels}; yet
- software-based security systems like ours are poorly equipped to handle
- a user who is entirely observed and controlled by the adversary. See
- Section~\ref{subsec:cafes-and-livecds} for more discussion of what little
- we can do about this issue.
- We assume that the user will fetch a genuine version of Tor, rather than
- one supplied by the adversary; see Section~\ref{subsec:trust-chain}
- for discussion on helping the user confirm that he has a genuine version
- and that he can connected to the real Tor network.
- \section{Related schemes}
- \subsection{public single-hop proxies}
- Anonymizer and friends
- \subsection{personal single-hop proxies}
- Psiphon, circumventor, cgiproxy.
- Simpler to deploy; can work without new client-side software.
- \subsection{JAP}
- Stefan's WPES paper is probably the closest related work, and is
- the starting point for the design in this paper.
- \subsection{break your sensitive strings into multiple tcp packets;
- ignore RSTs}
- \subsection{steganography}
- infranet
- \subsection{Internal caching networks}
- Freenet is deployed inside China and caches outside content.
- \subsection{Skype}
- port-hopping. encryption. voice communications not so susceptible to
- keystroke loggers (even graphical ones).
- \section{Components of the current Tor design}
- Tor provides three security properties:
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item 1. A local observer can't learn, or influence, your destination.
- \item 2. No single piece of the infrastructure can link you to your
- destination.
- \item 3. The destination, or somebody watching the destination,
- can't learn your location.
- \end{tightlist}
- We care most clearly about property number 1. But when the arms race
- progresses, property 2 will become important -- so the blocking adversary
- can't learn user+destination pairs just by volunteering a relay. It's not so
- clear to see that property 3 is important, but consider websites and
- services that are pressured into treating clients from certain network
- locations differently.
- Other benefits:
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item Separates the role of relay from the role of exit node.
- \item (Re)builds circuits automatically in the background, based on
- whichever paths work.
- \end{tightlist}
- \subsection{Tor circuits}
- can build arbitrary overlay paths given a set of descriptors~\cite{blossom}
- \subsection{Tor directory servers}
- central trusted locations that keep track of what Tor servers are
- available and usable.
- (threshold trust, so not quite so bad. See
- Section~\ref{subsec:trust-chain} for details.)
- \subsection{Tor user base}
- Hundreds of thousands of users from around the world. Some with publically
- reachable IP addresses.
- \section{Why hasn't Tor been blocked yet?}
- Hard to say. People think it's hard to block? Not enough users, or not
- enough ordinary users? Nobody has been embarrassed by it yet? "Steam
- valve"?
- \section{Components of a blocking-resistant design}
- Here we describe the new pieces we need to add to the current Tor design.
- \subsection{Bridge relays}
- Some Tor users on the free side of the network will opt to become
- \emph{bridge relays}. They will relay a small amount of bandwidth into
- the main Tor network, so they won't need to allow exits.
- They sign up on the bridge directory authorities (described below),
- and they use Tor to publish their descriptor so an attacker observing
- the bridge directory authority's network can't enumerate bridges.
- ...need to outline instructions for a Tor config that will publish
- to an alternate directory authority, and for controller commands
- that will do this cleanly.
- \subsection{The bridge directory authority (BDA)}
- They aggregate server descriptors just like the main authorities, and
- answer all queries as usual, except they don't publish full directories
- or network statuses.
- So once you know a bridge relay's key, you can get the most recent
- server descriptor for it.
- Since bridge authorities don't answer full network statuses, we
- need to add a new way for users to learn the current status for a
- single relay or a small set of relays -- to answer such questions as
- ``is it running?'' or ``is it behaving correctly?'' We describe in
- Section~\ref{subsec:enclave-dirs} a way for the bridge authority to
- publish this information without resorting to signing each answer
- individually.
- \subsection{Putting them together}
- If a blocked user has address information for one working bridge relay,
- then he can use it to make secure connections to the BDA to update his
- knowledge about other bridge
- relays, and he can make secure connections to the main Tor network
- and directory servers to build circuits and connect to the rest of
- the Internet.
- So now we've reduced the problem from how to circumvent the firewall
- for all transactions (and how to know that the pages you get have not
- been modified by the local attacker) to how to learn about a working
- bridge relay.
- The following section describes ways to bootstrap knowledge of your first
- bridge relay, and ways to maintain connectivity once you know a few
- bridge relays. (See Section~\ref{subsec:first-bridge} for a discussion
- of exactly what information is sufficient to characterize a bridge relay.)
- \section{Discovering and maintaining working bridge relays}
- Most government firewalls are not perfect. They allow connections to
- Google cache or some open proxy servers, or they let file-sharing or
- Skype or World-of-Warcraft connections through.
- For users who can't use any of these techniques, hopefully they know
- a friend who can -- for example, perhaps the friend already knows some
- bridge relay addresses.
- (If they can't get around it at all, then we can't help them -- they
- should go meet more people.)
- Thus they can reach the BDA. From here we either assume a social
- network or other mechanism for learning IP:dirport or key fingerprints
- as above, or we assume an account server that allows us to limit the
- number of new bridge relays an external attacker can discover.
- Going to be an arms race. Need a bag of tricks. Hard to say
- which ones will work. Don't spend them all at once.
- \subsection{Discovery based on social networks}
- A token that can be exchanged at the BDA (assuming you
- can reach it) for a new IP:dirport or server descriptor.
- The account server
- runs as a Tor controller for the bridge authority
- Users can establish reputations, perhaps based on social network
- connectivity, perhaps based on not getting their bridge relays blocked,
- (Lesson from designing reputation systems~\cite{p2p-econ}: easy to
- reward good behavior, hard to punish bad behavior.
- \subsection{How to allocate bridge addresses to users}
- Hold a fraction in reserve, in case our currently deployed tricks
- all fail at once -- so we can move to new approaches quickly.
- (Bridges that sign up and don't get used yet will be sad; but this
- is a transient problem -- if bridges are on by default, nobody will
- mind not being used.)
- Perhaps each bridge should be known by a single bridge directory
- authority. This makes it easier to trace which users have learned about
- it, so easier to blame or reward. It also makes things more brittle,
- since loss of that authority means its bridges aren't advertised until
- they switch, and means its bridge users are sad too.
- (Need a slick hash algorithm that will map our identity key to a
- bridge authority, in a way that's sticky even when we add bridge
- directory authorities, but isn't sticky when our authority goes
- away. Does this exist?)
- Divide bridges into buckets based on their identity key.
- [Design question: need an algorithm to deterministically map a bridge's
- identity key into a category that isn't too gameable. Take a keyed
- hash of the identity key plus a secret the bridge authority keeps?
- An adversary signing up bridges won't easily be able to learn what
- category he's been put in, so it's slow to attack.]
- One portion of the bridges is the public bucket. If you ask the
- bridge account server for a public bridge, it will give you a random
- one of these. We expect they'll be the first to be blocked, but they'll
- help the system bootstrap until it *does* get blocked, and remember that
- we're dealing with different blocking regimes around the world that will
- progress at different rates.
- The generalization of the public bucket is a bucket based on the bridge
- user's IP address: you can learn a random entry only from the subbucket
- your IP address (actually, your /24) maps to.
- Another portion of the bridges can be sectioned off to be given out in
- a time-release basis. The bucket is partitioned into pieces which are
- deterministically available only in certain time windows.
- And of course another portion is made available for the social network
- design above.
- Is it useful to load balance which bridges are handed out? The above
- bucket concept makes some bridges wildly popular and others less so.
- But I guess that's the point.
- \subsection{Bootstrapping: finding your first bridge}
- \label{subsec:first-bridge}
- Some techniques are sufficient to get us an IP address and a port,
- and others can get us IP:port:key. Lay out some plausible options
- for how users can bootstrap into learning their first bridge.
- \section{Security improvements}
- \subsection{Hiding Tor's network signatures}
- \label{subsec:enclave-dirs}
- The simplest format for communicating information about a bridge relay
- is as an IP address and port for its directory cache. From there, the
- user can ask the directory cache for an up-to-date copy of that bridge
- relay's server descriptor, to learn its current circuit keys, the port
- it uses for Tor connections, and so on.
- However, connecting directly to the directory cache involves a plaintext
- http request, so the censor could create a network signature for the
- request and/or its response, thus preventing these connections. Therefore
- we've modified the Tor protocol so that users can connect to the directory
- cache via the main Tor port -- they establish a TLS connection with
- the bridge as normal, and then send a Tor "begindir" relay cell to
- establish a connection to its directory cache.
- Predictable SSL ports:
- We should encourage most servers to listen on port 443, which is
- where SSL normally listens.
- Is that all it will take, or should we set things up so some fraction
- of them pick random ports? I can see that both helping and hurting.
- Predictable TLS handshakes:
- Right now Tor has some predictable strings in its TLS handshakes.
- These can be removed; but should they be replaced with nothing, or
- should we try to emulate some popular browser? In any case our
- protocol demands a pair of certs on both sides -- how much will this
- make Tor handshakes stand out?
- \subsection{Minimum info required to describe a bridge}
- In the previous subsection, we described a way for the bridge user
- to bootstrap into the network just by knowing the IP address and
- Tor port of a bridge. What about local spoofing attacks? That is,
- since we never learned an identity key fingerprint for the bridge,
- a local attacker could intercept our connection and pretend to be
- the bridge we had in mind. It turns out that giving false information
- isn't that bad -- since the Tor client ships with trusted keys for the
- bridge directory authority and the Tor network directory authorities,
- the user can learn whether he's being given a real connection to the
- bridge authorities or not. (If the adversary intercepts every connection
- the user makes and gives him a bad connection each time, there's nothing
- we can do.)
- What about anonymity-breaking attacks from observing traffic? Not so bad
- either, since the adversary could do the same attacks just by monitoring
- the network traffic.
- Once the Tor client has fetched the bridge's server descriptor at least
- once, he should remember the identity key fingerprint for that bridge
- relay. Thus if the bridge relay moves to a new IP address, the client
- can then query the bridge directory authority to look up a fresh server
- descriptor using this fingerprint.
- So we've shown that it's \emph{possible} to bootstrap into the network
- just by learning the IP address and port of a bridge, but are there
- situations where it's more convenient or more secure to learn its
- identity fingerprint at the beginning too? We discuss that question
- more in Section~\ref{sec:bootstrapping}, but first we introduce more
- security topics.
- \subsection{Scanning-resistance}
- If it's trivial to verify that we're a bridge, and we run on a predictable
- port, then it's conceivable our attacker would scan the whole Internet
- looking for bridges. (In fact, he can just scan likely networks like
- cablemodem and DSL services -- see Section~\ref{block-cable} for a related
- attack.) It would be nice to slow down this attack. It would
- be even nicer to make it hard to learn whether we're a bridge without
- first knowing some secret.
- \subsection{Password protecting the bridges}
- Could provide a password to the bridge user. He provides a nonced hash of
- it or something when he connects. We'd need to give him an ID key for the
- bridge too, and wait to present the password until we've TLSed, else the
- adversary can pretend to be the bridge and MITM him to learn the password.
- \subsection{Observers can tell who is publishing and who is reading}
- \label{subsec:upload-padding}
- Should bridge users sometimes send bursts of long-range drop cells?
- \subsection{Anonymity effects from becoming a bridge relay}
- Against some attacks, becoming a bridge relay can improve anonymity. The
- simplest example is an attacker who owns a small number of Tor servers. He
- will see a connection from the bridge, but he won't be able to know
- whether the connection originated there or was relayed from somebody else.
- There are some cases where it doesn't seem to help: if an attacker can
- watch all of the bridge's incoming and outgoing traffic, then it's easy
- to learn which connections were relayed and which started there. (In this
- case he still doesn't know the final destinations unless he is watching
- them too, but in this case bridges are no better off than if they were
- an ordinary client.)
- There are also some potential downsides to running a bridge. First, while
- we try to make it hard to enumerate all bridges, it's still possible to
- learn about some of them, and for some people just the fact that they're
- running one might signal to an attacker that they place a high value
- on their anonymity. Second, there are some more esoteric attacks on Tor
- relays that are not as well-understood or well-tested -- for example, an
- attacker may be able to ``observe'' whether the bridge is sending traffic
- even if he can't actually watch its network, by relaying traffic through
- it and noticing changes in traffic timing~\cite{attack-tor-oak05}. On
- the other hand, it may be that limiting the bandwidth the bridge is
- willing to relay will allow this sort of attacker to determine if it's
- being used as a bridge but not whether it is adding traffic of its own.
- It is an open research question whether the benefits outweigh the risks. A
- lot of the decision rests on which the attacks users are most worried
- about. For most users, we don't think running a bridge relay will be
- that damaging.
- \subsection{Trusting local hardware: Internet cafes and LiveCDs}
- \label{subsec:cafes-and-livecds}
- Assuming that users have their own trusted hardware is not
- always reasonable.
- For Internet cafe Windows computers that let you attach your own USB key,
- a USB-based Tor image would be smart. There's Torpark, and hopefully
- there will be more options down the road. Worries about hardware or
- software keyloggers and other spyware -- and physical surveillance.
- If the system lets you boot from a CD or from a USB key, you can gain
- a bit more security by bringing a privacy LiveCD with you. Hardware
- keyloggers and physical surveillance still a worry. LiveCDs also useful
- if it's your own hardware, since it's easier to avoid leaving breadcrumbs
- everywhere.
- \subsection{Forward compatibility and retiring bridge authorities}
- Eventually we'll want to change the identity key and/or location
- of a bridge authority. How do we do this mostly cleanly?
- \section{Performance improvements}
- \subsection{Fetch server descriptors just-in-time}
- I guess we should encourage most places to do this, so blocked
- users don't stand out.
- \section{Other issues}
- \subsection{How many bridge relays should you know about?}
- If they're ordinary Tor users on cable modem or DSL, many of them will
- disappear and/or move periodically. How many bridge relays should a
- blockee know
- about before he's likely to have at least one reachable at any given point?
- How do we factor in a parameter for "speed that his bridges get discovered
- and blocked"?
- The related question is: if the bridge relays change IP addresses
- periodically, how often does the bridge user need to "check in" in order
- to keep from being cut out of the loop?
- \subsection{How do we know if a bridge relay has been blocked?}
- We need some mechanism for testing reachability from inside the
- blocked area.
- The easiest answer is for certain users inside the area to sign up as
- testing relays, and then we can route through them and see if it works.
- First problem is that different network areas block different net masks,
- and it will likely be hard to know which users are in which areas. So
- if a bridge relay isn't reachable, is that because of a network block
- somewhere, because of a problem at the bridge relay, or just a temporary
- outage?
- Second problem is that if we pick random users to test random relays, the
- adversary should sign up users on the inside, and enumerate the relays
- we test. But it seems dangerous to just let people come forward and
- declare that things are blocked for them, since they could be tricking
- us. (This matters even moreso if our reputation system above relies on
- whether things get blocked to punish or reward.)
- Another answer is not to measure directly, but rather let the bridges
- report whether they're being used. If they periodically report to their
- bridge directory authority how much use they're seeing, the authority
- can make smart decisions from there.
- If they install a geoip database, they can periodically report to their
- bridge directory authority which countries they're seeing use from. This
- might help us to track which countries are making use of Ramp, and can
- also let us learn about new steps the adversary has taken in the arms
- race. (If the bridges don't want to install a whole geoip subsystem, they
- can report samples of the /24 network for their users, and the authorities
- can do the geoip work. This tradeoff has clear downsides though.)
- Worry: adversary signs up a bunch of already-blocked bridges. If we're
- stingy giving out bridges, users in that country won't get useful ones.
- (Worse, we'll blame the users when the bridges report they're not
- being used?)
- Worry: the adversary could choose not to block bridges but just record
- connections to them. So be it, I guess.
- \subsection{How to learn how well the whole idea is working}
- We need some feedback mechanism to learn how much use the bridge network
- as a whole is actually seeing. Part of the reason for this is so we can
- respond and adapt the design; part is because the funders expect to see
- progress reports.
- The above geoip-based approach to detecting blocked bridges gives us a
- solution though.
- \subsection{Cablemodem users don't provide important websites}
- \label{subsec:block-cable}
- ...so our adversary could just block all DSL and cablemodem networks,
- and for the most part only our bridge relays would be affected.
- The first answer is to aim to get volunteers both from traditionally
- ``consumer'' networks and also from traditionally ``producer'' networks.
- The second answer (not so good) would be to encourage more use of consumer
- networks for popular and useful websites.
- Other attack: China pressures Verizon to discourage its users from
- running bridges.
- \subsection{The trust chain}
- \label{subsec:trust-chain}
- Tor's ``public key infrastructure'' provides a chain of trust to
- let users verify that they're actually talking to the right servers.
- There are four pieces to this trust chain.
- Firstly, when Tor clients are establishing circuits, at each step
- they demand that the next Tor server in the path prove knowledge of
- its private key~\cite{tor-design}. This step prevents the first node
- in the path from just spoofing the rest of the path. Secondly, the
- Tor directory authorities provide a signed list of servers along with
- their public keys --- so unless the adversary can control a threshold
- of directory authorities, he can't trick the Tor client into using other
- Tor servers. Thirdly, the location and keys of the directory authorities,
- in turn, is hard-coded in the Tor source code --- so as long as the user
- got a genuine version of Tor, he can know that he is using the genuine
- Tor network. And lastly, the source code and other packages are signed
- with the GPG keys of the Tor developers, so users can confirm that they
- did in fact download a genuine version of Tor.
- But how can a user in an oppressed country know that he has the correct
- key fingerprints for the developers? As with other security systems, it
- ultimately comes down to human interaction. The keys are signed by dozens
- of people around the world, and we have to hope that our users have met
- enough people in the PGP web of trust~\cite{pgp-wot} that they can learn
- the correct keys. For users that aren't connected to the global security
- community, though, this question remains a critical weakness.
- % XXX make clearer the trust chain step for bridge directory authorities
- \subsection{How to motivate people to run bridge relays}
- One of the traditional ways to get people to run software that benefits
- others is to give them motivation to install it themselves. An often
- suggested approach is to install it as a stunning screensaver so everybody
- will be pleased to run it. We take a similar approach here, by leveraging
- the fact that these users are already interested in protecting their
- own Internet traffic, so they will install and run the software.
- Make all Tor users become bridges if they're reachable -- needs more work
- on usability first, but we're making progress.
- Also, we can make a snazzy network graph with Vidalia that emphasizes
- the connections the bridge user is currently relaying. (Minor anonymity
- implications, but hey.) (In many cases there won't be much activity,
- so this may backfire. Or it may be better suited to full-fledged Tor
- servers.)
- \subsection{What if the clients can't install software?}
- Bridge users without Tor clients
- Bridge relays could always open their socks proxy. This is bad though,
- firstly
- because they learn the bridge users' destinations, and secondly because
- we've learned that open socks proxies tend to attract abusive users who
- have no idea they're using Tor.
- Bridges could require passwords in the socks handshake (not supported
- by most software including Firefox). Or they could run web proxies
- that require authentication and then pass the requests into Tor. This
- approach is probably a good way to help bootstrap the Psiphon network,
- if one of its barriers to deployment is a lack of volunteers willing
- to exit directly to websites. But it clearly drops some of the nice
- anonymity features Tor provides.
- \section{Future designs}
- \subsection{Bridges inside the blocked network too}
- Assuming actually crossing the firewall is the risky part of the
- operation, can we have some bridge relays inside the blocked area too,
- and more established users can use them as relays so they don't need to
- communicate over the firewall directly at all? A simple example here is
- to make new blocked users into internal bridges also -- so they sign up
- on the BDA as part of doing their query, and we give out their addresses
- rather than (or along with) the external bridge addresses. This design
- is a lot trickier because it brings in the complexity of whether the
- internal bridges will remain available, can maintain reachability with
- the outside world, etc.
- Hidden services as bridges. Hidden services as bridge directory authorities.
- \bibliographystyle{plain} \bibliography{tor-design}
- \end{document}
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