Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 1 Anonymity and Privacy Enhancing Technologies Week 10 - November 2, 4
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 2 Cartoon dogs are anonymous on the Internet
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 3 Real dogs are anonymous on the Internet too!
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 4 The Internet can’t be censored “The Net treats censorship as damage and routes around it.” - John Gillmore
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 5 Actually, none of this is true It is easy to adopt a pseudonym or a persona on the Internet, but it is difficult to be truly anonymous Identities can usually be revealed with cooperation of ISP, local sys-admins, web logs, phone records, etc. The Internet can put up a good fight against censorship, but in the end there is still a lot of Internet censorship Repressive governments and intellectual property lawyers have been pretty successful at getting Internet content removed
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 6 Degrees of anonymity Absolute privacy: adversary cannot observe communication Beyond suspicion: no user is more suspicious than any other Probable innocence: each user is more likely innocent than not Possible innocence: nontrivial probability that user is innocent Exposed (default on web): adversary learns responsible user Provably exposed: adversary can prove your actions to others More Less
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 7 The Anonymizer Acts as a proxy for users Hides information from end servers Sees all web traffic Adds ads to pages (free service; subscription service also available) Anonymizer Request Reply ClientServer
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 8 Cryptography Basics Encryption algorithm used to make content unreadable by all but the intended receivers E(plaintext,key) = ciphertext D(ciphertext,key) = plaintext Symmetric (shared) key cryptography A single key is used is used for E and D D( E(p,k1), k1 ) = p Management of keys determines who has access to content E.g., password encrypted
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 9 Public Key Cryptography Public Key cryptography Each key pair consists of a public and private component: k + (public key), k - (private key) D( E(p, k + ), k - ) = p D( E(p, k - ), k + ) = p Public keys are distributed (typically) through public key certificates Anyone can communicate secretly with you if they have your certificate E.g., SSL-base web commerce
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 10 B,kAkA CkBkB Mixes [Chaum81] Sender routes message randomly through network of “Mixes”, using layered public-key encryption. Mix A dest,msg kCkC CkBkB kCkC kCkC SenderDestination msg Mix C k X = encrypted with public key of Mix X Mix B
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 11 Crowds Users join a Crowd of other users Web requests from the crowd cannot be linked to any individual Protection from end servers other crowd members system administrators eavesdroppers First system to hide data shadow on the web without trusting a central authority
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 12 Crowds Crowd membersWeb servers
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 13 Anonymous censorship-resistant publishing The printing press and the WWW can be powerful revolutionary tools Political dissent Whistle blowing Radical ideas but those who seek to suppress revolutions have powerful tools of their own Stop publication Destroy published materials Prevent distribution Intimidate or physically or financially harm author or publisher
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 14 Anonymity increases censorship-resistance Reduces ability to force “voluntary” self- censorship Allows some authors to have their work taken more seriously Reduces bias due to gender, race, ethnic background, social position, etc. Many historical examples of important anonymous publications In the Colonies during Revolutionary War when British law prohibited writings suggesting overthrow of the government Federalist papers
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 15 Publius design goals Censorship resistant Tamper evident Source anonymous Updateable Deniable Fault tolerant Persistent Extensible Freely Available
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 16 Publius Overview Publius Content – Static content (HTML, images, PDF, etc) Publishers – Post Publius content Servers – Host Publius content Retrievers – Browse Publius content PublishersServersRetrievers
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 17 Publishing a Publius document Generate secret key and use it to encrypt document Use “secret splitting” to split key into n shares This technique has special property that only k out of n shares are needed to put the key back together Publish encrypted document and 1 share on each of n servers Generate special Publius URL that encodes the location of each share and encrypted document – example: PublishersServers
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 18 Retrieving a Publius document Break apart URL to discover document locations Retrieve encrypted document and share from k locations Reassemble key from shares Decrypt retrieved document Check for tampering View in web browser PublishersServersRetrievers
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 19 Publius proxies Publius proxies running on a user’s local machine or on the network handle all the publish and retrieve operations Proxies also allow publishers to delete and update content PublishersServersRetrievers PROXYPROXY PROXYPROXY
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 20 Threats and limitations Attacks on server resources 100K Content Limit (easy to subvert) Server limits # of files it will store Possibility: use a payment scheme Threats to publisher anonymity “Rubber-Hose Cryptanalysis” Added “don’t update” and don’t delete bit Logging, network segment eavesdropping Collaboration of servers to censor content A feature?
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 21 Discussion Technology that can protect “good” speech also protects “bad” speech What if your dog does publish your secrets to the Internet and you can't do anything about it? Is building a censorship-resistant publishing system irresponsible? If a tree falls in a forest and nobody hears it….
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 22 For further reading Publius web site Publius chapter in Peer-to-Peer: Harnessing the Power of Disruptive Technologies edited by Andy Oram The Architecture of Robust Publishing Systems. ACM Transactions on Internet Technology 1(2):
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 23 Anonymous Anonymous r ers allow people to send anonymously Similar to anonymous web proxies Send mail to r er, which strips out any identifying information (very controversial) Johan (Julf) Helsingius ~ Penet Some can be chained and work like mixes
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 24 Regulatory and self-regulatory framework ServiceUser The Internet Secure channel P3P user agent Cookie cutter Anonymizing agent Privacy tools
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 25 Anonymity tool applications Communication Publishing Payments Voting Surveys Credentials
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 26 Homework 10 discussion 10.html 10.html
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 27 Homework html 11.html
Privacy Policy, Law and Technology Carnegie Mellon University Fall 2004 Lorrie Cranor 28 Guest speaker Ann Cavoukian