On Sat, Jan 25, 2014 at 3:23 PM, Ben Laurie <[email protected]> wrote: > [low latency vs. anonymity] > > Actually, it seems it is a natural law. > > Hope is not a strategy.
natural in that they interfere with each other? (like multi-path fade, apply science for great justice! (e.g. more radios, better encoding turns multi-path from detriment to signal positive)) if high bandwidth[0] is half way there, and so many techniques[1] yet unexplored, why the pessimism? it is certainly taking too long to get here, of course. *grin* best regards, 0. "Towards Efficient Traffic-analysis Resistant Anonymity Networks" http://research.microsoft.com/apps/pubs/?id=199302 """ In this paper, we present the design, implementation, and evaluation of Aqua, a high bandwidth anonymity system that resists traffic analysis. We focus on providing strong anonymity for BitTorrent, and evaluate the performance of Aqua using traces from hundreds of thousands of actual Bit-Torrent users. We show that Aqua achieves latency low enough for efficient bulk TCP flows, bandwidth sufficient to carry BitTorrent traffic with reasonable efficiency, and resistance to traffic analysis within anonymity sets of hundreds of clients. We conclude that Aqua represents an interesting new point in the space of anonymity network designs. """ 1. various datagram based Tor-like protocols with traffic analysis protections afforded new multi-path, out-of-order, stochastic shaped bandwidth in non-TCP, non-stream based variants. plenty of fertile research ground across: - IPsec telescopes - DTLS transports for Tor - userspace SCTP multi-path end-to-exit and end-to-hiddensvc over datagram Tor, I2P, etc. - userspace IPv6 with ORCHID based node identifier overlay as endpoint and route addressing to existing applications. - new variations and combinations of optimized dynamic link padding - decentralized low bandwidth directory/path building low overhead techniques - stochastic fair queuing and reordering with traffic source classification into priority queues for even lower path latency, RTT. and many more, not on top of mind... [obligatory link to anon bib here] -- Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations of list guidelines will get you moderated: https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech. Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at [email protected].
