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							- Filename: 116-two-hop-paths-from-guard.txt
 
- Title: Two hop paths from entry guards
 
- Author: Michael Lieberman
 
- Created: 26-Jun-2007
 
- Status: Dead
 
- This proposal is related to (but different from) Mike Perry's proposal 115
 
- "Two Hop Paths."
 
- Overview:
 
- Volunteers who run entry guards should have the option of using only 2
 
- additional tor nodes when constructing their own tor circuits.
 
- While the option of two hop paths should perhaps be extended to every client
 
- (as discussed in Mike Perry's thread), I believe the anonymity properties of
 
- two hop paths are particularly well-suited to client computers that are also
 
- serving as entry guards.
 
- First I will describe the details of the strategy, as well as possible
 
- avenues of attack. Then I will list advantages and disadvantages. Then, I
 
- will discuss some possibly safer variations of the strategy, and finally
 
- some implementation issues.
 
- Details:
 
- Suppose Alice is an entry guard, and wants to construct a two hop circuit.
 
- Alice chooses a middle node at random (not using the entry guard strategy),
 
- and gains anonymity by having her traffic look just like traffic from
 
- someone else using her as an entry guard.
 
- Can Alice's middle node figure out that she is initiator of the traffic? I
 
- can think of four possible approaches for distinguishing traffic from Alice
 
- with traffic through Alice:
 
- 1) Notice that communication from Alice comes too fast: Experimentation is
 
- needed to determine if traffic from Alice can be distinguished from traffic
 
- from a computer with a decent link to Alice.
 
- 2) Monitor Alice's network traffic to discover the lack of incoming packets
 
- at the appropriate times. If an adversary has this ability, then Alice
 
- already has problems in the current system, because the adversary can run a
 
- standard timing attack on Alice's traffic.
 
- 3) Notice that traffic from Alice is unique in some way such that if Alice
 
- was just one of 3 entry guards for this traffic, then the traffic should be
 
- coming from two other entry guards as well. An example of "unique traffic"
 
- could be always sending 117 packets every 3 minutes to an exit node that
 
- exits to port 4661. However, if such patterns existed with sufficient
 
- precision, then it seems to me that Tor already has a problem. (This "unique
 
- traffic" may not be a problem if clients often end up choosing a single
 
- entry guard because their other two are down. Does anyone know if this is
 
- the case?)
 
- 4) First, control the middle node *and* some other part of the traffic,
 
- using standard attacks on a two hop circuit without entry nodes (my recent
 
- paper on Browser-Based Attacks would work well for this
 
- http://petworkshop.org/2007/papers/PET2007_preproc_Browser_based.pdf). With
 
- control of the circuit, we can now cause "unique traffic" as in 3).
 
- Alternatively, if we know something about Alice independently, and we can
 
- see what websites are being visited, we might be able to guess that she is
 
- the kind of person that would visit those websites.
 
- Anonymity Advantages:
 
- -Alice never has the problem of choosing a malicious entry guard. In some
 
- sense, Alice acts as her own entry guard.
 
- Anonymity Disadvantages:
 
- -If Alice's traffic is identified as originating from herself (see above for
 
- how hard that might be), then she has the anonymity of a 2 hop circuit
 
- without entry guards.
 
- Additional advantages:
 
- -A discussion of the latency advantages of two hop circuits is going on in
 
- Mike Perry's thread already.
 
- -Also, we can advertise this change as "Run an entry guard and decrease your
 
- own Tor latency." This incentive has the potential to add nodes to the
 
- network, improving the network as a whole.
 
- Safer variations:
 
- To solve the "unique traffic" problem, Alice could use two hop paths only
 
- 1/3 of the time, and choose 2 other entry guards for the other 2/3 of the
 
- time. All the advantages are now 1/3 as useful (possibly more, if the other
 
- 2 entry guards are not always up).
 
- To solve the problem that Alice's responses are too fast, Alice could delay
 
- her responses (ideally based on some real data of response time when Alice
 
- is used an entry guard). This loses most of the speed advantages of the two
 
- hop path, but if Alice is a fast entry guard, it doesn't lose everything. It
 
- also still has the (arguable) anonymity advantage that Alice doesn't have to
 
- worry about having a malicious entry guard.
 
- Implementation details:
 
- For Alice to remain anonymous using this strategy, she has to actually be
 
- acting as an entry guard for other nodes. This means the two hop option can
 
- only be available to whatever high-performance threshold is currently set on
 
- entry guards. Alice may need to somehow check her own current status as an
 
- entry guard before choosing this two hop strategy.
 
- Another thing to consider: suppose Alice is also an exit node. If the
 
- fraction of exit nodes in existence is too small, she may rarely or never be
 
- chosen as an entry guard. It would be sad if we offered an incentive to run
 
- an entry guard that didn't extend to exit nodes. I suppose clients of Exit
 
- nodes could pull the same trick, and bypass using Tor altogether (zero hop
 
- paths), though that has additional issues.*
 
- Mike Lieberman
 
- MIT
 
- *Why we shouldn't recommend Exit nodes pull the same trick:
 
- 1) Exit nodes would suffer heavily from the problem of "unique traffic"
 
- mentioned above.
 
- 2) It would give governments an incentive to confiscate exit nodes to see if
 
- they are pulling this trick.
 
 
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