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- Filename: 115-two-hop-paths.txt
- Title: Two Hop Paths
- Version: $Revision$
- Last-Modified: $Date$
- Author: Mike Perry
- Created:
- Status: Open
- Supersedes: 112
- Overview:
- The idea is that users should be able to choose if they would like
- to have either two or three hop paths through the tor network.
- This value should be modifiable from the controller, and should be
- available from Vidalia.
- Motivation:
- The Tor network is slow and overloaded. Increasingly often I hear
- stories about friends and friends of friends who are behind firewalls,
- annoying censorware, or under surveillance that interferes with their
- productivity and Internet usage, or chills their speech. These people
- know about Tor, but they choose to put up with the censorship because
- Tor is too slow to be usable for them. In fact, to download a fresh,
- complete copy of levine-timing.pdf for the Theoretical Argument
- section of this proposal over Tor took me 3 tries.
- Furthermore, the biggest current problem with Tor's anonymity for
- those who really need it is not someone attacking the network to
- discover who they are. It's instead the extreme danger that so few
- people use Tor because it's so slow, that those who do use it have
- essentially no confusion set.
- The recent case where the professor and the rogue Tor user were the
- only Tor users on campus, and thus suspected in an incident involving
- Tor and that University underscores this point: "That was why the police
- had come to see me. They told me that only two people on our campus were
- using Tor: me and someone they suspected of engaging in an online scam.
- The detectives wanted to know whether the other user was a former
- student of mine, and why I was using Tor"[1].
- Not only does Tor provide no anonymity if you use it to be anonymous
- but are obviously from a certain institution, location or circumstance,
- it is also dangerous to use Tor for risk of being accused of having
- something significant enough to hide to be willing to put up with
- the horrible performance.
- There are many ways to improve the speed problem, and of course we
- should and will implement as many as we can. Johannes's GSoC project
- and my reputation system are longer term, higher-effort things that
- will still provide benefit independent of this proposal.
- However, reducing the path length to 2 for those who do not need the
- (questionable) extra anonymity 3 hops provide not only improves their
- Tor experience but also reduces their load on the Tor network by 33%,
- and can be done in less than 10 lines of code (not counting various
- security enhancements). That's not just Win-Win, it's Win-Win-Win.
- Theoretical Argument:
- It has long been established that timing attacks against mixed
- and onion networks are extremely effective, and that regardless
- of path length, if the adversary has compromised your first and
- last hop of your path, you can assume they have compromised your
- identity for that connection.
- In fact, it was demonstrated that for all but the slowest, lossiest
- networks, error rates for false positives and false negatives were
- very near zero[2]. Only for constant streams of traffic over slow and
- (more importantly) extremely lossy network links did the error rate
- hit 20%. For loss rates typical to the Internet, even the error rate
- for slow nodes with constant traffic streams was 13%.
- When you take into account that most Tor streams are not constant,
- but probably much more like their "HomeIP" dataset, which consists
- mostly of web traffic that exists over finite intervals at specific
- times, error rates drop to fractions of 1%, even for the "worst"
- network nodes.
- Therefore, the user has little benefit from the extra hop, assuming
- the adversary does timing correlation on their nodes. Since timing
- correlation is simply an implementation issue and is most likely
- a single up-front cost (and one that is like quite a bit cheaper
- than the cost of the machines purchased to host the nodes to mount
- an attack), the real protection is the low probability of getting
- both the first and last hop of a client's stream.
- Practical Issues:
- Theoretical issues aside, there are several practical issues with the
- implementation of Tor that need to be addressed to ensure that
- identity information is not leaked by the implementation.
- Exit policy issues:
- If a client chooses an exit with a very restrictive exit policy
- (such as an IP or IP range), the first hop then knows a good deal
- about the destination. For this reason, clients should not select
- exits that match their destination IP with anything other than "*".
- Partitioning:
- Partitioning attacks form another concern. Since Tor uses telescoping
- to build circuits, it is possible to tell a user is constructing only
- two hop paths at the entry node and on the local network. An external
- adversary can potentially differentiate 2 and 3 hop users, and decide
- that all IP addresses connecting to Tor and using 3 hops have something
- to hide, and should be scrutinized more closely or outright apprehended.
- One solution to this is to use the "leaky-circuit" method of attaching
- streams: The user always creates 3-hop circuits, but if the option
- is enabled, they always exit from their 2nd hop. The ideal solution
- would be to create a RELAY_SHISHKABOB cell which contains onion
- skins for every host along the path, but this requires protocol
- changes at the nodes to support.
- Guard nodes:
- Since guard nodes do rotate due to network failure, node upgrades and
- other issues, if you amortize the risk a user is exposed to over any
- reasonable duration of Tor usage (on the order of a year), it is the
- same with or without guard nodes. Assuming an adversary has c%/n% of
- network bandwidth, and guards rotate on average with period R,
- statistically speaking, it's merely a question of if the user wishes
- their risk to be concentrated with probability c/n over an expected
- period of R*c, and probability 0 over an expected period of R*(n-c),
- versus a continuous risk of (c/n)^2. So statistically speaking, guards
- only create a time-tradeoff of risk over the long run for normal Tor
- usage. They do not reduce risk for normal client usage long term.[3]
- Guard nodes do offer a measure of accountability of sorts. If a user
- was using a small set of guard nodes, and then is suddenly apprehended
- as a result of Tor usage, having a fixed set of entry points to suspect
- is a lot better than suspecting the whole network.
- It has been speculated that a set of guard nodes can be used to
- fingerprint a user (presumably by a local adversary) when they move
- about. However, it is precisely this activity of moving your laptop that
- causes guards to be marked as down by the Tor client, which then chooses
- new ones.
- All of this is not terribly relevant to this proposal, but worth bearing
- in mind, since guard nodes do have a bit more ability to wreak
- havoc with two hops than with three.
- Two hop paths allow malicious guards to get considerably more benefit
- from failing circuits if they do not extend to their colluding peers for
- the exit hop. Since guards can detect the number of hops in a path via
- either timing or by statistical analysis of the exit policy of the 2nd
- hop, they can perform this attack predominantly against 2 hop users
- only.
- This can be addressed by completely abandoning an entry guard after a
- certain ratio of extend or general circuit failures with respect to
- non-failed circuits. The proper value for this ratio can be determined
- experimentally with TorFlow. There is the possibility that the local
- network can abuse this feature to cause certain guards to be dropped,
- but they can do that anyways with the current Tor by just making guards
- they don't like unreachable. With this mechanism, Tor will complain
- loudly if any guard failure rate exceeds the expected in any failure
- case, local or remote.
- Eliminating guards entirely would actually not address this issue due
- to the time-tradeoff nature of risk. In fact, it would just make it
- worse. Without guard nodes, it becomes much more difficult for clients
- to become alerted to Tor entry points that are failing circuits to make
- sure that they only devote bandwidth to carry traffic for streams which
- they observe both ends.
- For this reason, guard nodes should remain enabled for 2 hop users,
- at least until an IP-independent, undetectable guard scanner can
- be created. TorFlow can scan for failing guards, but after a while,
- its unique behavior gives away the fact that its IP is a scanner and
- it can be given selective service.
- Why not fix Pathlen=2?:
- The main reason I am not advocating that we always use 2 hops is that
- in some situations, timing correlation evidence by itself may not be
- considered as solid and convincing as an actual, uninterrupted, fully
- traced path. Are these timing attacks as effective on a real network as
- they are in simulation? Maybe the circuit multiplexing of Tor can serve
- to frustrate them to a degree? Would an extralegal adversary or
- authoritarian government even care? In the face of these situation
- dependent unknowns, it should be up to the user to decide if this is
- a concern for them or not.
- It should probably also be noted that even a false positive
- rate of 1% for a 200k concurrent-user network could mean that for a
- given node, a given stream could be confused with something like 10
- users, assuming ~200 nodes carry most of the traffic (ie 1000 users
- each). Though of course to really know for sure, someone needs to do
- an attack on a real network, unfortunately.
- Additionally, at some point cover traffic schemes may be implemented to
- frustrate timing attacks on the first hop. It is possible some expert
- users may do this ad-hoc already, and may wish to continue using 3 hops
- for this reason.
- Who will enable this option?
- This is the crux of the proposal. Admittedly, there is some anonymity
- loss and some degree of decreased investment required on the part of
- the adversary to attack 2 hop users versus 3 hop users, even if it is
- minimal and limited mostly to up-front costs and false positives.
- The key questions are:
- 1. Are these users in a class such that their risk is significantly
- less than the amount of this anonymity loss?
- 2. Are these users able to identify themselves?
- Many many users of Tor are not at risk for an adversary capturing c/n
- nodes of the network just to see what they do. These users use Tor to
- circumvent aggressive content filters, or simply to keep their IP out of
- marketing and search engine databases. Most content filters have no
- interest in running Tor nodes to catch violators, and marketers
- certainly would never consider such a thing, both on a cost basis and a
- legal one.
- In a sense, this represents an alternate threat model against these
- users who are not at risk for Tor's normal threat model.
- It should be evident to these users that they fall into this class. All
- that should be needed is a radio button
- * "I use Tor for censorship resistance and IP obfuscation, not anonymity.
- Speed is more important to me than high anonymity."
- * "I use Tor for anonymity. I need more protection at the cost of speed."
-
- and then some explanation in the help for exactly what this means, and
- the risks involved with eliminating the adversary's need for timing
- attacks with respect to false positives.
- Implementation:
- new_route_len() can be modified directly with a check of the
- Pathlen option.
- The exit policy hack is a bit more tricky. compare_addr_to_addr_policy
- needs to return an alternate ADDR_POLICY_ACCEPTED_WILDCARD or
- ADDR_POLICY_ACCEPTED_SPECIFIC return value for use in
- circuit_is_acceptable.
-
- The leaky exit is trickier still.. handle_control_attachstream
- does allow paths to exit at a given hop. Presumably something similar
- can be done in connection_ap_handshake_process_socks, and elsewhere?
- Circuit construction would also have to be performed such that the
- 2nd hop's exit policy is what is considered, not the 3rd's.
- The entry_guard_t structure could have num_circ_failed and
- num_circ_succeeded members such that if it exceeds F% circuit
- extend failure rate to a second hop, it is removed from the entry list.
- F should be sufficiently high to avoid churn from normal Tor circuit
- failure as determined by TorFlow scans.
- The Vidalia option should be presented as a radio button.
- Migration:
- Phase 1: Adjust exit policy checks if Pathlen is set. Modify
- new_route_len() to obey a 'Pathlen' config option.
- Phase 2: Implement leaky circuit ability.
- Phase 3: Experiment to determine the proper ratio of circuit
- failures used to expire garbage or malicious guards via TorFlow
- (pending Bug #440 backport+adoption).
- Phase 4: Implement guard expiration code to kick off failure-prone
- guards and warn the user.
- Phase 5: Make radiobutton in Vidalia, along with help entry
- that explains in layman's terms the risks involved.
- Phase 6: Allow user to specify pathlength by HTTP URL suffix.
- [1] http://p2pnet.net/story/11279
- [2] http://www.cs.umass.edu/~mwright/papers/levine-timing.pdf
- [3] Proof available upon request ;)
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