tor-design.tex 36 KB

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  34. \title{Tor: Design of a Next-Generation Onion Router}
  35. %\author{Anonymous}
  36. %\author{Roger Dingledine \\ The Free Haven Project \\ arma@freehaven.net \and
  37. %Nick Mathewson \\ The Free Haven Project \\ nickm@freehaven.net \and
  38. %Paul Syverson \\ Naval Research Lab \\ syverson@itd.nrl.navy.mil}
  39. \maketitle
  40. \thispagestyle{empty}
  41. \begin{abstract}
  42. We present Tor, a connection-based low-latency anonymous communication
  43. system. It is intended as an update and replacement for onion routing
  44. and addresses many limitations in the original onion routing design.
  45. Tor works in a real-world Internet environment,
  46. requires little synchronization or coordination between nodes, and
  47. protects against known anonymity-breaking attacks as well
  48. as or better than other systems with similar design parameters.
  49. \end{abstract}
  50. %\begin{center}
  51. %\textbf{Keywords:} anonymity, peer-to-peer, remailer, nymserver, reply block
  52. %\end{center}
  53. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
  54. \Section{Overview}
  55. \label{sec:intro}
  56. Onion routing is a distributed overlay network designed to anonymize
  57. low-latency TCP-based applications such as web browsing, secure shell,
  58. and instant messaging. Users choose a path through the network and
  59. build a \emph{virtual circuit}, in which each node in the path knows its
  60. predecessor and successor, but no others. Traffic flowing down the circuit
  61. is sent in fixed-size \emph{cells}, which are unwrapped by a symmetric key
  62. at each node, revealing the downstream node. The original onion routing
  63. project published several design and analysis papers
  64. \cite{or-jsac98,or-discex00,or-ih96,or-pet00}. While there was briefly
  65. a wide area onion routing network,
  66. the only long-running and publicly accessible
  67. implementation was a fragile proof-of-concept that ran on a single
  68. machine. Many critical design and deployment issues were never implemented,
  69. and the design has not been updated in several years.
  70. Here we describe Tor, a protocol for asynchronous, loosely
  71. federated onion routers that provides the following improvements over
  72. the old onion routing design:
  73. \begin{tightlist}
  74. \item \textbf{Perfect forward secrecy:} The original onion routing
  75. design is vulnerable to a single hostile node recording traffic and later
  76. forcing successive nodes in the circuit to decrypt it. Rather than using
  77. onions to lay the circuits, Tor uses an incremental or \emph{telescoping}
  78. path-building design, where the initiator negotiates session keys with
  79. each successive hop in the circuit. Onion replay detection is no longer
  80. necessary, and the network as a whole is more reliable to boot, since
  81. the initiator knows which hop failed and can try extending to a new node.
  82. \item \textbf{Applications talk to the onion proxy via Socks:}
  83. The original onion routing design required a separate proxy for each
  84. supported application protocol, resulting in a lot of extra code (most
  85. of which was never written) and also meaning that a lot of TCP-based
  86. applications were not supported. Tor uses the unified and standard Socks
  87. \cite{socks4,socks5} interface, allowing us to support any TCP-based
  88. program without modification.
  89. \item \textbf{Many applications can share one circuit:} The original
  90. onion routing design built one circuit for each request. Aside from the
  91. performance issues of doing public key operations for every request, it
  92. also turns out that regular communications patterns mean building lots
  93. of circuits, which can endanger anonymity.
  94. The very first onion routing design \cite{or-ih96} protected against
  95. this to some extent by hiding network access behind an onion
  96. router/firewall that was also forwarding traffic from other nodes.
  97. However, even if this meant complete protection, many users can
  98. benefit from onion routing for which neither running one's own node
  99. nor such firewall configurations are adequately convenient to be
  100. feasible. Those users, especially if they engage in certain unusual
  101. communication behaviors, may be identifiable \cite{wright03}. To
  102. complicate the possibility of such attacks Tor multiplexes many
  103. connections down each circuit, but still rotates the circuit
  104. periodically to avoid too much linkability from requests on a single
  105. circuit.
  106. \item \textbf{No mixing or traffic shaping:} The original onion routing
  107. design called for full link padding both between onion routers and between
  108. onion proxies (that is, users) and onion routers \cite{or-jsac98}. The
  109. later analysis paper \cite{or-pet00} suggested \emph{traffic shaping}
  110. to provide similar protection but use less bandwidth, but did not go
  111. into detail. However, recent research \cite{econymics} and deployment
  112. experience \cite{freedom21-security} indicate that this level of resource
  113. use is not practical or economical; and even full link padding is still
  114. vulnerable to active attacks \cite{defensive-dropping}.
  115. %[An upcoming FC04 paper. I'll add a cite when it's out. -RD]
  116. \item \textbf{Leaky pipes:} Through in-band signalling within the
  117. circuit, Tor initiators can direct traffic to nodes partway down the
  118. circuit. This allows for long-range padding to frustrate traffic
  119. shape and volume attacks at the initiator \cite{defensive-dropping},
  120. but because circuits are used by more than one application, it also
  121. allows traffic to exit the circuit from the middle -- thus
  122. frustrating traffic shape and volume attacks based on observing exit
  123. points.
  124. %Or something like that. hm. Tone this down maybe? Or support it. -RD
  125. %How's that? -PS
  126. \item \textbf{Congestion control:} Earlier anonymity designs do not
  127. address traffic bottlenecks. Unfortunately, typical approaches to load
  128. balancing and flow control in overlay networks involve inter-node control
  129. communication and global views of traffic. Our decentralized ack-based
  130. congestion control maintains reasonable anonymity while allowing nodes
  131. at the edges of the network to detect congestion or flooding attacks
  132. and send less data until the congestion subsides.
  133. \item \textbf{Directory servers:} Rather than attempting to flood
  134. link-state information through the network, which can be unreliable and
  135. open to partitioning attacks or outright deception, Tor takes a simplified
  136. view towards distributing link-state information. Certain more trusted
  137. onion routers also serve as directory servers; they provide signed
  138. \emph{directories} describing all routers they know about, and which
  139. are currently up. Users periodically download these directories via HTTP.
  140. \item \textbf{End-to-end integrity checking:} Without integrity checking
  141. on traffic going through the network, an onion router can change the
  142. contents of cells as they pass by, e.g. by redirecting a connection on
  143. the fly so it connects to a different webserver, or by tagging encrypted
  144. traffic and looking for traffic at the network edges that has been
  145. tagged \cite{minion-design}.
  146. \item \textbf{Robustness to node failure:} router twins
  147. \item \textbf{Exit policies:}
  148. Tor provides a consistent mechanism for each node to specify and
  149. advertise an exit policy.
  150. \item \textbf{Rendezvous points:}
  151. location-protected servers
  152. \end{tightlist}
  153. We review previous work in Section \ref{sec:background}, describe
  154. our goals and assumptions in Section \ref{sec:assumptions},
  155. and then address the above list of improvements in Sections
  156. \ref{sec:design}-\ref{sec:maintaining-anonymity}. We then summarize
  157. how our design stands up to known attacks, and conclude with a list of
  158. open problems.
  159. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
  160. \Section{Background and threat model}
  161. \label{sec:background}
  162. \SubSection{Related work}
  163. \label{sec:related-work}
  164. Modern anonymity designs date to Chaum's Mix-Net\cite{chaum-mix} design of
  165. 1981. Chaum proposed hiding sender-recipient connections by wrapping
  166. messages in several layers of public key cryptography, and relaying them
  167. through a path composed of Mix servers. Mix servers in turn decrypt, delay,
  168. and re-order messages, before relay them along the path towards their
  169. destinations.
  170. Subsequent relay-based anonymity designs have diverged in two
  171. principal directions. Some have attempted to maximize anonymity at
  172. the cost of introducing comparatively large and variable latencies,
  173. for example, Babel\cite{babel}, Mixmaster\cite{mixmaster-spec}, and
  174. Mixminion\cite{minion-design}. Because of this
  175. decision, such \emph{high-latency} networks are well-suited for anonymous
  176. email, but introduce too much lag for interactive tasks such as web browsing,
  177. internet chat, or SSH connections.
  178. Tor belongs to the second category: \emph{low-latency} designs that
  179. attempt to anonymize interactive network traffic. Because such
  180. traffic tends to involve a relatively large numbers of packets, it is
  181. difficult to prevent an attacker who can eavesdrop entry and exit
  182. points from correlating packets entering the anonymity network with
  183. packets leaving it. Although some work has been done to frustrate
  184. these attacks, most designs protect primarily against traffic analysis
  185. rather than traffic confirmation \cite{or-jsac98}. One can pad and
  186. limit communication to a constant rate or at least to control the
  187. variation in traffic shape. This can have prohibitive bandwidth costs
  188. and/or performance limitations. One can also use a cascade (fixed
  189. shared route) with a relatively fixed set of users. This assumes a
  190. significant degree of agreement and provides an easier target for an active
  191. attacker since the endpoints are generally known. However, a practical
  192. network with both of these features and thousands of active users has
  193. been run for many years (the Java Anon Proxy, aka Web MIXes,
  194. \cite{web-mix}).
  195. Another low latency design that was proposed independently and at
  196. about the same time as onion routing was PipeNet \cite{pipenet}.
  197. This provided anonymity protections that were stronger than onion routing's,
  198. but at the cost of allowing a single user to shut down the network simply
  199. by not sending. It was also never implemented or formally published.
  200. The simplest low-latency designs are single-hop proxies such as the
  201. Anonymizer \cite{anonymizer}, wherein a single trusted server removes
  202. identifying users' data before relaying it. These designs are easy to
  203. analyze, but require end-users to trust the anonymizing proxy.
  204. More complex are distributed-trust, channel-based anonymizing systems. In
  205. these designs, a user establishes one or more medium-term bidirectional
  206. end-to-end tunnels to exit servers, and uses those tunnels to deliver a
  207. number of low-latency packets to and from one or more destinations per
  208. tunnel. Establishing tunnels is comparatively expensive and typically
  209. requires public-key cryptography, whereas relaying packets along a tunnel is
  210. comparatively inexpensive. Because a tunnel crosses several servers, no
  211. single server can learn the user's communication partners.
  212. Systems such as earlier versions of Freedom and onion routing
  213. build the anonymous channel all at once (using an onion). Later
  214. designs of Freedom and onion routing as described herein build
  215. the channel in stages as does AnonNet
  216. \cite{anonnet}. Amongst other things, this makes perfect forward
  217. secrecy feasible.
  218. Some systems, such as Crowds \cite{crowds-tissec}, do not rely on the
  219. changing appearance of packets to hide the path; rather they employ
  220. mechanisms so that an intermediary cannot be sure when it is
  221. receiving from/sending to the ultimate initiator. There is no public-key
  222. encryption needed for Crowds, but the responder and all data are
  223. visible to all nodes on the path so that anonymity of connection
  224. initiator depends on filtering all identifying information from the
  225. data stream. Crowds is also designed only for HTTP traffic.
  226. Hordes \cite{hordes-jcs} is based on Crowds but also uses multicast
  227. responses to hide the initiator. Herbivore \cite{herbivore} and
  228. P5 \cite{p5} go even further requiring broadcast.
  229. They each use broadcast in very different ways, and tradeoffs are made to
  230. make broadcast more practical. Both Herbivore and P5 are designed primarily
  231. for communication between communicating peers, although Herbivore
  232. permits external connections by requesting a peer to serve as a proxy.
  233. Allowing easy connections to nonparticipating responders or recipients
  234. is a practical requirement for many users, e.g., to visit
  235. nonparticipating Web sites or to exchange mail with nonparticipating
  236. recipients.
  237. Distributed-trust anonymizing systems differ in how they prevent attackers
  238. from controlling too many servers and thus compromising too many user paths.
  239. Some protocols rely on a centrally maintained set of well-known anonymizing
  240. servers. Current Tor design falls into this category.
  241. Others (such as Tarzan and MorphMix) allow unknown users to run
  242. servers, while using a limited resource (DHT space for Tarzan; IP space for
  243. MorphMix) to prevent an attacker from owning too much of the network.
  244. Crowds uses a centralized ``blender'' to enforce Crowd membership
  245. policy. For small crowds it is suggested that familiarity with all
  246. members is adequate. For large diverse crowds, limiting accounts in
  247. control of any one party is more difficult:
  248. ``(e.g., the blender administrator sets up an account for a user only
  249. after receiving a written, notarized request from that user) and each
  250. account to one jondo, and by monitoring and limiting the number of
  251. jondos on any one net- work (using IP address), the attacker would be
  252. forced to launch jondos using many different identities and on many
  253. different networks to succeed'' \cite{crowds-tissec}.
  254. [XXX I'm considering the subsection as ended here for now. I'm leaving the
  255. following notes in case we want to revisit any of them. -PS]
  256. There are also many systems which are intended for anonymous
  257. and/or censorship resistant file sharing. [XXX Should we list all these
  258. or just say it's out of scope for the paper?
  259. eternity, gnunet, freenet, freehaven, publius, tangler, taz/rewebber]
  260. Channel-based anonymizing systems also differ in their use of dummy traffic.
  261. [XXX]
  262. Finally, several systems provide low-latency anonymity without channel-based
  263. communication. Crowds and [XXX] provide anonymity for HTTP requests; [...]
  264. [XXX Mention error recovery?]
  265. anonymizer\\
  266. pipenet\\
  267. freedom v1\\
  268. freedom v2\\
  269. onion routing v1\\
  270. isdn-mixes\\
  271. crowds\\
  272. real-time mixes, web mixes\\
  273. anonnet (marc rennhard's stuff)\\
  274. morphmix\\
  275. P5\\
  276. gnunet\\
  277. rewebbers\\
  278. tarzan\\
  279. herbivore\\
  280. hordes\\
  281. cebolla (?)\\
  282. [XXX Close by mentioning where Tor fits.]
  283. \Section{Design goals and assumptions}
  284. \label{sec:assumptions}
  285. \subsection{Goals}
  286. % Are these really our goals? ;) -NM
  287. Like other low-latency anonymity designs, Tor seeks to frustrate
  288. attackers from linking communication partners, or from linking
  289. multiple communications to or from a single point. Within this
  290. overriding goal, however, several design considerations have directed
  291. Tor's evolution.
  292. First, we have tried to build a {\bf deployable} system. [XXX why?]
  293. This requirement precludes designs that are expensive to run (for
  294. example, by requiring more bandwidth than volunteers are easy to
  295. provide); designs that place a heavy liability burden on operators
  296. (for example, by allowing attackers to implicate operators in illegal
  297. activities); and designs that are difficult or expensive to implement
  298. (for example, by requiring kernel patches to many operating systems,
  299. or ).
  300. Second, the system must be {\bf usable}. A hard-to-use system has
  301. fewer users---and because anonymity systems hide users among users, a
  302. system with fewer users provides less anonymity. Thus, usability is
  303. not only a convenience, but is a security requirement for anonymity
  304. systems.
  305. Third, the protocol must be {\bf extensible}, so that it can serve as
  306. a test-bed for future research in low-latency anonymity systems.
  307. (Note that while an extensible protocol benefits researchers, there is
  308. a danger that differing choices of extensions will render users
  309. distinguishable. Thus, implementations should not permit different
  310. protocol extensions to coexist in a single deployed network.)
  311. The protocol's design and security parameters must be {\bf
  312. conservative}. Additional features impose implementation and
  313. complexity costs. [XXX Say that we don't want to try to come up with
  314. speculative solutions to problems we don't KNOW how to solve? -NM]
  315. [XXX mention something about robustness? But we really aren't that
  316. robust. We just assume that tunneled protocols tolerate connection
  317. loss. -NM]
  318. \subsection{Non-goals}
  319. In favoring conservative, deployable designs, we have explicitly
  320. deferred a number of goals---not because they are not desirable in
  321. anonymity systems---but because solving them is either solved
  322. elsewhere, or an area of active research without a generally accepted
  323. solution.
  324. Unlike Tarzan or Morphmix, Tor does not attempt to scale to completely
  325. decentralized peer-to-peer environments with thousands of short-lived
  326. servers.
  327. Tor does not claim to provide a definitive solution to end-to-end
  328. timing or intersection attacks for users who do not run their own
  329. Onion Routers.
  330. Tor does not provide ``protocol normalization'' like the Anonymizer,
  331. Privoxy, or XXX. In order to provide client indistinguishibility for
  332. complex and variable protocols such as HTTP, Tor must be layered with
  333. a proxy such as Privoxy or XXX. Similarly, Tor does not currently
  334. integrate tunneling for non-stream-based protocols; this too must be
  335. provided by an external service.
  336. Tor is not steganographic. It doesn't try to conceal which users are
  337. sending or receiving communications via Tor.
  338. \SubSection{Adversary Model}
  339. \label{subsec:adversary-model}
  340. Like all practical low-latency systems, Tor is broken against a global
  341. passive adversary, the most commonly assumed adversary for analysis of
  342. theoretical anonymous communication designs. The adversary we assume
  343. is weaker than global with respect to distribution, but it is not
  344. merely passive.
  345. We assume a threat model that expands on that from \cite{or-pet00}.
  346. The basic adversary components we consider are:
  347. \begin{description}
  348. \item[Observer:] can observe a connection (e.g., a sniffer on an
  349. Internet router), but cannot initiate connections. Observations may
  350. include timing and/or volume of packets as well as appearance of
  351. individual packets (including headers and content).
  352. \item[Disrupter:] can delay (indefinitely) or corrupt traffic on a
  353. link. Can change all those things that an observer can observe up to
  354. the limits of computational ability (e.g., cannot forge signatures
  355. unless a key is compromised).
  356. \item[Hostile initiator:] can initiate (destroy) connections with
  357. specific routes as well as varying the timing and content of traffic
  358. on the connections it creates. A special case of the disrupter with
  359. additional abilities appropriate to its role in forming connections.
  360. \item[Hostile responder:] can vary the traffic on the connections made
  361. to it including refusing them entirely, intentionally modifying what
  362. it sends and at what rate, and selectively closing them. Also a
  363. special case of the disrupter.
  364. \item[Key breaker:] can break the longterm private decryption key of a
  365. Tor-node.
  366. \item[Compromised Tor-node:] can arbitrarily manipulate the connections
  367. under its control, as well as creating new connections (that pass
  368. through itself).
  369. \end{description}
  370. All feasible adversaries can be composed out of these basic
  371. adversaries. This includes combinations such as one or more
  372. compromised Tor-nodes cooperating with disrupters of links on which
  373. those nodes are not adjacent, or such as combinations of hostile
  374. outsiders and link observers (who watch links between adjacent
  375. Tor-nodes). Note that one type of observer might be a Tor-node. This
  376. is sometimes called an honest-but-curious adversary. While an observer
  377. Tor-node will perform only correct protocol interactions, it might
  378. share information about connections and cannot be assumed to destroy
  379. session keys at end of a session. Note that a compromised Tor-node is
  380. stronger than any other adversary component in the sense that
  381. replacing a component of any adversary with a compromised Tor-node
  382. results in a stronger overall adversary (assuming that the compromised
  383. Tor-node retains the same signature keys and other private
  384. state-information as the component it replaces).
  385. In general we are more focused on traffic analysis attacks than
  386. traffic confirmation attacks. A user who runs a Tor proxy on his own
  387. machine, connects to some remote Tor-node and makes a connection to an
  388. open Internet site, such as a public web server, is vulnerable to
  389. traffic confirmation. That is, an active attacker who suspects that
  390. the particular client is communicating with the particular server will
  391. be able to confirm this if she can attack and observe both the
  392. connection between the Tor network and the client and that between the
  393. Tor network and the server. Even a purely passive attacker will be
  394. able to confirm if the timing and volume properties of the traffic on
  395. the connnection are unique enough. This is not to say that Tor offers
  396. no resistance to traffic confirmation; it does. We defer discussion
  397. of this point and of particular attacks until Section~\ref{sec:attacks},
  398. after we have described Tor in more detail. However, we note here some
  399. basic assumptions that affect the threat model.
  400. [XXX I think this next subsection should be cut, leaving its points
  401. for the attacks section. But I'm leaving it here for now. The above
  402. line refers to the immediately following SubSection.-PS]
  403. \SubSection{Known attacks against low-latency anonymity systems}
  404. \label{subsec:known-attacks}
  405. We discuss each of these attacks in more detail below, along with the
  406. aspects of the Tor design that provide defense. We provide a summary
  407. of the attacks and our defenses against them in Section~\ref{sec:attacks}.
  408. Passive attacks:
  409. simple observation,
  410. timing correlation,
  411. size correlation,
  412. option distinguishability,
  413. Active attacks:
  414. key compromise,
  415. iterated subpoena,
  416. run recipient,
  417. run a hostile node,
  418. compromise entire path,
  419. selectively DOS servers,
  420. introduce timing into messages,
  421. directory attacks,
  422. tagging attacks
  423. \SubSection{Assumptions}
  424. All dirservers are honest and trusted.
  425. Somewhere between ten percent and twenty percent of nodes
  426. are compromised. In some circumstances, e.g., if the Tor network
  427. is running on a hardened network where all operators have had careful
  428. background checks, the percent of compromised nodes might be much
  429. lower. Also, it may be worthwhile to consider cases where many
  430. of the `bad' nodes are not fully compromised but simply (passive)
  431. observing adversaries. We assume that all adversary components,
  432. regardless of their capabilities are collaborating and are connected
  433. in an offline clique.
  434. - Threat model
  435. - Mostly reliable nodes: not trusted.
  436. - Small group of trusted dirserv ops
  437. - Many users of diff bandwidth come and go.
  438. [XXX what else?]
  439. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
  440. \Section{The Tor Design}
  441. \label{sec:design}
  442. \Section{Other design decisions}
  443. \SubSection{Exit policies and abuse}
  444. \label{subsec:exitpolicies}
  445. \SubSection{Directory Servers}
  446. \label{subsec:dir-servers}
  447. \Section{Rendezvous points: location privacy}
  448. \label{sec:rendezvous}
  449. Rendezvous points are a building block for \emph{location-hidden services}
  450. (aka responder anonymity) in the Tor network. Location-hidden
  451. services means Bob can offer a tcp service, such as an Apache webserver,
  452. without revealing the IP of that service.
  453. We provide this censorship resistance for Bob by allowing him to
  454. advertise several onion routers (his \emph{Introduction Points}) as his
  455. public location. Alice, the client, chooses a node for her \emph{Meeting
  456. Point}. She connects to one of Bob's introduction points, informs him
  457. about her meeting point, and then waits for him to connect to the meeting
  458. point. This extra level of indirection means Bob's introduction points
  459. don't open themselves up to abuse by serving files directly, eg if Bob
  460. chooses a node in France to serve material distateful to the French. The
  461. extra level of indirection also allows Bob to respond to some requests
  462. and ignore others.
  463. We provide the necessary glue so that Alice can view webpages from Bob's
  464. location-hidden webserver with minimal invasive changes. Both Alice and
  465. Bob must run local onion proxies.
  466. The steps of a rendezvous:
  467. \begin{tightlist}
  468. \item Bob chooses some Introduction Points, and advertises them on a
  469. Distributed Hash Table (DHT).
  470. \item Bob establishes onion routing connections to each of his
  471. Introduction Points, and waits.
  472. \item Alice learns about Bob's service out of band (perhaps Bob told her,
  473. or she found it on a website). She looks up the details of Bob's
  474. service from the DHT.
  475. \item Alice chooses and establishes a Meeting Point (MP) for this
  476. transaction.
  477. \item Alice goes to one of Bob's Introduction Points, and gives it a blob
  478. (encrypted for Bob) which tells him about herself, the Meeting Point
  479. she chose, and the first half of an ephemeral key handshake. The
  480. Introduction Point sends the blob to Bob.
  481. \item Bob chooses whether to ignore the blob, or to onion route to MP.
  482. Let's assume the latter.
  483. \item MP plugs together Alice and Bob. Note that MP can't recognize Alice,
  484. Bob, or the data they transmit (they share a session key).
  485. \item Alice sends a Begin cell along the circuit. It arrives at Bob's
  486. onion proxy. Bob's onion proxy connects to Bob's webserver.
  487. \item Data goes back and forth as usual.
  488. \end{tightlist}
  489. When establishing an introduction point, Bob provides the onion router
  490. with a public ``introduction'' key. The hash of this public key
  491. identifies a unique service, and (since Bob is required to sign his
  492. messages) prevents anybody else from usurping Bob's introduction point
  493. in the future. Bob uses the same public key when establish the other
  494. introduction points for that service.
  495. The blob that Alice gives the introduction point includes a hash of Bob's
  496. public key to identify the service, an optional initial authentication
  497. token (the introduction point can do prescreening, eg to block replays),
  498. and (encrypted to Bob's public key) the location of the meeting point,
  499. a meeting cookie Bob should tell the meeting point so he gets connected to
  500. Alice, an optional authentication token so Bob choose whether to respond,
  501. and the first half of a DH key exchange. When Bob connects to the meeting
  502. place and gets connected to Alice's pipe, his first cell contains the
  503. other half of the DH key exchange.
  504. \subsection{Integration with user applications}
  505. For each service Bob offers, he configures his local onion proxy to know
  506. the local IP and port of the server, a strategy for authorizating Alices,
  507. and a public key. We assume the existence of a robust decentralized
  508. efficient lookup system which allows authenticated updates, eg
  509. \cite{cfs:sosp01}. (Each onion router could run a node in this lookup
  510. system; also note that as a stopgap measure, we can just run a simple
  511. lookup system on the directory servers.) Bob publishes into the DHT
  512. (indexed by the hash of the public key) the public key, an expiration
  513. time (``not valid after''), and the current introduction points for that
  514. service. Note that Bob's webserver is completely oblivious to the fact
  515. that it's hidden behind the Tor network.
  516. As far as Alice's experience goes, we require that her client interface
  517. remain a SOCKS proxy, and we require that she shouldn't have to modify
  518. her applications. Thus we encode all of the necessary information into
  519. the hostname (more correctly, fully qualified domain name) that Alice
  520. uses, eg when clicking on a url in her browser. Location-hidden services
  521. use the special top level domain called `.onion': thus hostnames take the
  522. form x.y.onion where x encodes the hash of PK, and y is the authentication
  523. cookie. Alice's onion proxy examines hostnames and recognizes when they're
  524. destined for a hidden server. If so, it decodes the PK and starts the
  525. rendezvous as described in the table above.
  526. \subsection{Previous rendezvous work}
  527. Ian Goldberg developed a similar notion of rendezvous points for
  528. low-latency anonymity systems \cite{ian-thesis}. His ``service tag''
  529. is the same concept as our ``hash of service's public key''. We make it
  530. a hash of the public key so it can be self-authenticating, and so the
  531. client can recognize the same service with confidence later on. His
  532. design differs from ours in the following ways though. Firstly, Ian
  533. suggests that the client should manually hunt down a current location of
  534. the service via Gnutella; whereas our use of the DHT makes lookup faster,
  535. more robust, and transparent to the user. Secondly, the client and server
  536. can share ephemeral DH keys, so at no point in the path is the plaintext
  537. exposed. Thirdly, our design is much more practical for deployment in a
  538. volunteer network, in terms of getting volunteers to offer introduction
  539. and meeting point services. The introduction points do not output any
  540. bytes to the clients. And the meeting points don't know the client,
  541. the server, or the stuff being transmitted. The indirection scheme
  542. is also designed with authentication/authorization in mind -- if the
  543. client doesn't include the right cookie with its request for service,
  544. the server doesn't even acknowledge its existence.
  545. \Section{Maintaining anonymity sets}
  546. \label{sec:maintaining-anonymity}
  547. packet counting attacks work great against initiators. need to do some
  548. level of obfuscation for that. standard link padding for passive link
  549. observers. long-range padding for people who own the first hop. are
  550. we just screwed against people who insert timing signatures into your
  551. traffic?
  552. Even regardless of link padding from Alice to the cloud, there will be
  553. times when Alice is simply not online. Link padding, at the edges or
  554. inside the cloud, does not help for this.
  555. how often should we pull down directories? how often send updated
  556. server descs?
  557. when we start up the client, should we build a circuit immediately,
  558. or should the default be to build a circuit only on demand? should we
  559. fetch a directory immediately?
  560. would we benefit from greater synchronization, to blend with the other
  561. users? would the reduced speed hurt us more?
  562. does the "you can't see when i'm starting or ending a stream because
  563. you can't tell what sort of relay cell it is" idea work, or is just
  564. a distraction?
  565. does running a server actually get you better protection, because traffic
  566. coming from your node could plausibly have come from elsewhere? how
  567. much mixing do you need before this is actually plausible, or is it
  568. immediately beneficial because many adversary can't see your node?
  569. do different exit policies at different exit nodes trash anonymity sets,
  570. or not mess with them much?
  571. do we get better protection against a realistic adversary by having as
  572. many nodes as possible, so he probably can't see the whole network,
  573. or by having a small number of nodes that mix traffic well? is a
  574. cascade topology a more realistic way to get defenses against traffic
  575. confirmation? does the hydra (many inputs, few outputs) topology work
  576. better? are we going to get a hydra anyway because most nodes will be
  577. middleman nodes?
  578. using a circuit many times is good because it's less cpu work
  579. good because of predecessor attacks with path rebuilding
  580. bad because predecessor attacks can be more likely to link you with a
  581. previous circuit since you're so verbose
  582. bad because each thing you do on that circuit is linked to the other
  583. things you do on that circuit
  584. Because Tor runs over TCP, when one of the servers goes down it seems
  585. that all the circuits (and thus streams) going over that server must
  586. break. This reduces anonymity because everybody needs to reconnect
  587. right then (does it? how much?) and because exit connections all break
  588. at the same time, and it also reduces usability. It seems the problem
  589. is even worse in a p2p environment, because so far such systems don't
  590. really provide an incentive for nodes to stay connected when they're
  591. done browsing, so we would expect a much higher churn rate than for
  592. onion routing. Are there ways of allowing streams to survive the loss
  593. of a node in the path?
  594. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
  595. \Section{Attacks and Defenses}
  596. \label{sec:attacks}
  597. Below we summarize a variety of attacks and how well our design withstands
  598. them.
  599. \begin{enumerate}
  600. \item \textbf{Passive attacks}
  601. \begin{itemize}
  602. \item \emph{Simple observation.}
  603. \item \emph{Timing correlation.}
  604. \item \emph{Size correlation.}
  605. \item \emph{Option distinguishability.}
  606. \end{itemize}
  607. \item \textbf{Active attacks}
  608. \begin{itemize}
  609. \item \emph{Key compromise.}
  610. \item \emph{Iterated subpoena.}
  611. \item \emph{Run recipient.}
  612. \item \emph{Run a hostile node.}
  613. \item \emph{Compromise entire path.}
  614. \item \emph{Selectively DoS servers.}
  615. \item \emph{Introduce timing into messages.}
  616. \item \emph{Tagging attacks.}
  617. \end{itemize}
  618. \item \textbf{Directory attacks}
  619. \begin{itemize}
  620. \item foo
  621. \end{itemize}
  622. \end{enumerate}
  623. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
  624. \Section{Future Directions and Open Problems}
  625. \label{sec:conclusion}
  626. Tor brings together many innovations into
  627. a unified deployable system. But there are still several attacks that
  628. work quite well, as well as a number of sustainability and run-time
  629. issues remaining to be ironed out. In particular:
  630. \begin{itemize}
  631. \item \emph{Scalability:} Since Tor's emphasis currently is on simplicity
  632. of design and deployment, the current design won't easily handle more
  633. than a few hundred servers, because of its clique topology. Restricted
  634. route topologies \cite{danezis-pets03} promise comparable anonymity
  635. with much better scaling properties, but we must solve problems like
  636. how to randomly form the network without introducing net attacks.
  637. % [cascades are a restricted route topology too. we must mention
  638. % earlier why we're not satisfied with the cascade approach.]-RD
  639. % [We do. At least
  640. \item \emph{Cover traffic:} Currently we avoid cover traffic because
  641. it introduces clear performance and bandwidth costs, but and its
  642. security properties are not well understood. With more research
  643. \cite{SS03,defensive-dropping}, the price/value ratio may change, both for
  644. link-level cover traffic and also long-range cover traffic. In particular,
  645. we expect restricted route topologies to reduce the cost of cover traffic
  646. because there are fewer links to cover.
  647. \item \emph{Better directory distribution:} Even with the threshold
  648. directory agreement algorithm described in \ref{sec:dirservers},
  649. the directory servers are still trust bottlenecks. We must find more
  650. decentralized yet practical ways to distribute up-to-date snapshots of
  651. network status without introducing new attacks.
  652. \item \emph{Implementing location-hidden servers:} While Section
  653. \ref{sec:rendezvous} provides a design for rendezvous points and
  654. location-hidden servers, this feature has not yet been implemented.
  655. We will likely encounter additional issues, both in terms of usability
  656. and anonymity, that must be resolved.
  657. \item \emph{Wider-scale deployment:} The original goal of Tor was to
  658. gain experience in deploying an anonymizing overlay network, and learn
  659. from having actual users. We are now at the point where we can start
  660. deploying a wider network. We will see what happens!
  661. % ok, so that's hokey. fix it. -RD
  662. \end{itemize}
  663. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
  664. %\Section{Acknowledgments}
  665. %% commented out for anonymous submission
  666. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
  667. \bibliographystyle{latex8}
  668. \bibliography{tor-design}
  669. \end{document}
  670. % Style guide:
  671. % U.S. spelling
  672. % avoid contractions (it's, can't, etc.)
  673. % 'mix', 'mixes' (as noun)
  674. % 'mix-net'
  675. % 'mix', 'mixing' (as verb)
  676. % 'Mixminion Project'
  677. % 'Mixminion' (meaning the protocol suite or the network)
  678. % 'Mixmaster' (meaning the protocol suite or the network)
  679. % 'middleman' [Not with a hyphen; the hyphen has been optional
  680. % since Middle English.]
  681. % 'nymserver'
  682. % 'Cypherpunk', 'Cypherpunks', 'Cypherpunk remailer'
  683. %
  684. % 'Whenever you are tempted to write 'Very', write 'Damn' instead, so
  685. % your editor will take it out for you.' -- Misquoted from Mark Twain