[tor-dev] GSoC project idea: pluggable transport that hides data in TCP SEQ numbers / UDP SRC ports
Ian Goldberg
iang at cs.uwaterloo.ca
Tue Jan 7 16:02:48 UTC 2014
On Tue, Jan 07, 2014 at 06:41:02AM -0800, Jacek Wielemborek wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I recently had an opportunity to watch David Fifield's lightning talk on
> pluggable transports that he gave on 30C3. I find the topic fascinating and I'm
> considering an application to your project for the upcoming Google Summer of
> Code.
>
> My idea is a bit complicated - I'd like to create a pluggable transport that
> hides data in TCP sequence number gaps or UDP source port numbers. I don't yet
> have all details thought over, but the way I imagine it right now, the user
> would have to establish a TCP or UDP connection to the relay. The connection
> could be completely bogus, though it'd be useful if a lot of data was sent
> over it. After connecting, the client sends to the server a message with a
> random RSA key steganographically hidden in the TCP sequence numbers. If the
> server replies the same way with an RSA-encrypted AES key, the rest of the
> hidden transmission goes encrypted with it. Since the SEQ number gaps are
> meant to be random anyway, I believe that this could be very hard to detect.
Only the initial SEQ of a TCP connection is random (and usually only ~24
bits at that). The subsequent SEQs are deterministic. Can you clarify
your intent?
- Ian
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