[tor-talk] Tor Weekly News — October 23th, 2013

author at anonymousbitcoinbook.com author at anonymousbitcoinbook.com
Thu Oct 24 18:21:06 UTC 2013


By changing the browser fingerprint, do you mean altering the HTTP 
request headers, such as the User-agent? You'd need to decrypt SSL/TLS 
traffic in order to modify the headers of any request sent over SSL/TLS, 
so that limits you to plaintext HTTP traffic.

You COULD alter HTTP request headers at each hop, but let me raise a 
potential objection: A considerable number of websites return different 
HTTP responses based on the contents of HTTP request headers, so you'd 
be potentially mucking up the deterministic output of web applications. 
A common example is returning a different version of a website when the 
User-Agent indicates a mobile device. One obvious part of the browser 
fingerprint is unique cookie values, such as those set by third-party ad 
domains. Cookies would be one of the trickiest to modify, because they 
are integral to the function of the vast majority of websites, and it 
would be difficult when to mutate a cookie value without negatively 
impacting the function of the web application.

-Kristov

On 2013-10-24 10:26, Joe Btfsplk wrote:
> On 10/23/2013 8:04 AM, Lunar wrote:
>> Tor Weekly News                                       October 23th, 
>> 2013
>> 
>> “some circuits are going to be compromised, but it’s better to 
>> increase your
>> probability of having no compromised circuits at the expense of also
>> _INCREASING THE PROPORTION_ of your circuits that will be compromised 
>> if
>> any of them are.”
> I read the paper -  slept since then.
> 
> Would someone please clarify this general statement & that part of
> the design concept?
> 
> The statement in https://www.torproject.org/docs/faq#EntryGuards is a
> bit confusing.
> /"But profiling is, for most users, as bad as being traced all the
> time: they want to do something often without an attacker noticing,
> and the attacker noticing once is as bad as the attacker noticing more
> often."/
> 
> How is being "noticed" once, perhaps for 15 seconds,  visiting one
> website - that yields very little info, better than being noticed many
> times, over a long period?
> 
> Is it that once an adversary correlates your machine (fingerprint) w/
> an originating IP & a Tor entry / exit, they could theoretically ID
> you?
> 
> If so, doesn't that beg the question of why does TBB keep the same
> browser fingerprint from entry to exit?
> Why (have or allow TBB to) keep the same fingerprint over long
> periods, even if some of that data is spoofed, rather than TBB
> randomly change (spoof) the fingerprint, from end to end on one
> circuit and / or over time?
> 
> One big problem as I understand, is a Tor user (specific browser on
> specific machine) is potentially identifiable from entry to exit, by
> having the same fingerprint.
> Why not change the fingerprint?  Put on a "hat & glasses" or
> "different colored coat" part way through the circuit?  TBB already
> spoofs SOME browser data - it just remains constant.  Maybe other
> tracking issues completely over shadow this.
> 
> Even if having TBB change fingerprints along a circuit and / or at
> other times doesn't solve all problems, could it be a *part* of
> reducing fingerprinting and / or tracking?


More information about the tor-talk mailing list