How is this conceptually different from a 2-node Tor network, where each ISP operates one node of the pair linking to every other ISP (so there are I^2 pairs)? Additional benefit of using Tor would be mixing and making traffic analysis harder. Threat modelling could draw on the existing research on Tor vulnerabilities. Also, an ISP could easily, today, run single-node Tor network to obscure end point locations. The problem does not seem technical at all. The problem is that ISPs have physical addresses. What you need is a floating ISP ... go anywhere, travel light, get in, get out, wherever there's trouble, a man alone. On 8/3/13 19:57 , Nick Thomas wrote:
Hi all,
Only a decade or two late to the party... anyway, in the past few days since the PRISM / XKeyscore / etc leaks came to my attention, I've been considering schemes that breaks the kind of passive, drag-net collection of communications data from listening points on submarine cables and the like. I think I've found one, so I thought I'd share.
Code is in very, very early stages at the moment; https://github.com/lupine/hide-eid has half of a first pass, and a bit of documentation on why it might work. I'm hoping to have it in a state where you could run a pair of VPN providers servicing a few customers each within a few days. As-is, scalability is suspect, though.
The short how-it-works is that it stops the IP header (which typically reveals who is talking to whom, even if the IP payload is encrypted) from being personally-identifying information. I! f your access ISP runs it, and your hosting ISP runs it too, you benefit from an anonymity set equal to all the source's customers. As long as there's no sniffing going on in the first and last mile, anyway.
Combined with IPsec on those miles, or a vetted path if it's short enough, you can reduce the amount of cable that personally-identifying IP headers are sniffable on, from a few thousand miles, to perhaps a couple of feet - on which you can focus CCTV, if you're *really* paranoid; or even nothing at all, if you have the same box terminating the IPsec tunnel and the hide-eid wrapper/unwrapper.
The theoretical background is from the location/identity separation protocol stuff. Intermediaries don't actually need to know which person (well, EID) the packet is from, or for; they just need to know where to send it (which RLOC) so that a person can pick it up. This scheme is basically that, imagined as a least-effort over! lay on the existing IP network. And it doesn't break as many protocols as cgNAT, since source and destination both know the EID of destination and source.
Feedback of any sort is extremely welcome. Particular areas of concern are scaling it (especially given how the crypto works), how the crypto works and if there's a more sensible way (key exchange with M:N different ISPs to take advantage of symmetric ciphers is worrisome), and whether there's a better way to get L/ISP with hidden EIDs deployed to a subset of the internet than a hack of this magnitude. I'm still fairly skeptical that it can make a noticeable difference, but it seems promising enough for me to keep it up in the short term, at least.
If it ends up being useless, there's still tor. There's always tor.
/Nick