Re: Remailer latencies (fwd)
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And, since you asked, would it not be in the interests of remailer operators to have a script which would generate random text, encrypt it to various remailers and send it out as 'cover traffic'? It would seem to me that this would be particularly valuable for
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 9/26/97 11:49 PM, Jim Choate (ravage@ssz.com) passed this wisdom: the
remailers that receive the least amount of traffic.
This aspect of traffic cover is more complex than it at first seems. Take for example the second simplest model that I am aware of. For each email that comes in n bogus emails go out with one remailed copy. So for each email we receive we end up processing n+2 emails. Since to be useful n must be reasonably larger than 2 to be effective we are left with a quandry. Aswe process more traffic (ie become successful) we find our bandwidth need growing at a linear rate of n, unfortunately the skills and resources to support this increase also get larger as we become more successful.
I am incline to think that as the traffic goes up the need to generate 'n' mails for each 'real' inbound/outbound goes down. It would seem to me that one could specify a general volume level, ie, in a given period of time, say 1 hour if only 1-20 objects of mail comes in, generate some random amount between say 20 and 100 bogus objects to have a volume level that provides the uncertainty to foil/complicate traffic analysis. If 20 to 40 real mails come in, generate 30 to 150 objects, if 40 to 100 comes in maybe only 40 to 200 extra objects. As the volume rises, it seems to be the need for voluminous additional bogus objects decreases somewhat as you have plenty of objects to get a good 'mix' and 'latency.' I will admit I am a neophyte here and am working more on what appears to me as common sense; I would be happy to be educated as to what is wrong with the above logic ... -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0 Charset: noconv iQA/AwUBNC0UPsdZgC62U/gIEQKBXgCfZIXbYvWRz2dyGknCt8YXw6Uz+2IAnjO0 4Qf0UZLqODa4GYioABPAPjcf =CUL5 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Brian B. Riley --> http://www.macconnect.com/~brianbr For PGP Keys <mailto:brianbr@together.net?subject=Get%20PGP%20Key> "I left him for dead and buried his axe. If there was a Valhalla, I wanted him weaponless." from "Highlander"
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Brian B. Riley