NICRMar 13, 2015

RAPTOR: Routing Attacks on Privacy in Tor

arXiv:1503.03940v1249 citations
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This work addresses critical privacy risks for Tor users by revealing new attack vectors, motivating the design of routing-aware anonymity systems.

The paper tackles the vulnerability of the Tor network to anonymity attacks by Autonomous Systems, presenting Raptor, a suite of new attacks that exploit Internet routing asymmetries, churn, and BGP manipulation, and demonstrates their feasibility through analysis and real-world tests on the live Tor network.

The Tor network is a widely used system for anonymous communication. However, Tor is known to be vulnerable to attackers who can observe traffic at both ends of the communication path. In this paper, we show that prior attacks are just the tip of the iceberg. We present a suite of new attacks, called Raptor, that can be launched by Autonomous Systems (ASes) to compromise user anonymity. First, AS-level adversaries can exploit the asymmetric nature of Internet routing to increase the chance of observing at least one direction of user traffic at both ends of the communication. Second, AS-level adversaries can exploit natural churn in Internet routing to lie on the BGP paths for more users over time. Third, strategic adversaries can manipulate Internet routing via BGP hijacks (to discover the users using specific Tor guard nodes) and interceptions (to perform traffic analysis). We demonstrate the feasibility of Raptor attacks by analyzing historical BGP data and Traceroute data as well as performing real-world attacks on the live Tor network, while ensuring that we do not harm real users. In addition, we outline the design of two monitoring frameworks to counter these attacks: BGP monitoring to detect control-plane attacks, and Traceroute monitoring to detect data-plane anomalies. Overall, our work motivates the design of anonymity systems that are aware of the dynamics of Internet routing.

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