Low-Cost Traffic Analysis of Tor

Paul Syverson syverson at itd.nrl.navy.mil
Fri Oct 7 19:21:20 UTC 2005


Hi Andrei,

Who is this from?

Question from a two second glance, which is all I can spare at the
moment: probabilistic throughput guarantee? Does this imply
probabilistic guarantee of delivery? If so, you're talking UDP or
something not TCP in any case. In which case you're talking
substantial change from current Tor. Thus maybe an interesting design
theory suggestion, but something that will not be implementable in the
system for years if ever.

Gotta run,
Paul


On Fri, Oct 07, 2005 at 08:08:27PM +0100, Andrei Serjantov wrote:
> > Greetings. Let me introduce myself. I'm a grad student and the U of MN
> > in computer science. I've been working on anonymous network systems. I
> > also had a chance to play with Tor, and read the "Low-Cost Traffic
> > Analysis of Tor" paper (mentioned below).
> > I have a general question: this may or may not decrease performance, but
> > wouldn't locking and/or randomizing bandwidth per flow through a Tor
> > server solve this problem? This attack seem comparable to a variant on
> > SSL (and general crypto) timing attacks. Similar solutions could be
> > applied. Also, since this attack relies on a malicious node being able
> > to estimate its flow's likely performance through an honest node at any
> > given time, Tor could apply a somewhat more complex mixing approach,
> > making this attack more difficult. I was thinking of something like
> > lottery scheduling, which is really easy to implement and, if done
> > right, will not impose any noticeable CPU overhead, and still provide
> > the same (albeit probabilistic, not deterministic) throughput guarantees
> > for every flow. Please let me know your thoughts. I will hopefully have
> > some time to spend implementing this in the near future, if there is a
> > consensus that some of these suggestions would help.
> 
> Before you start hacking, I would advocate writing down your mixing
> strategy and trying to show (or at least argue) that what you are
> doing has a reasonable anonymity/performance tradeoff. It's probably
> worth sticking my nose out and saying that Tor does not really want to
> do any mixing for performance reasons -- lower performance means lower
> number of users and hence lower anonymity sets against weaker
> adversaries..... (hmm is this strictly true?? I suppose the anonymity
> set is the set of all people if you don't observe the entire network)
> 
> A.



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