Re: [tor-dev] Proposal 302: Hiding onion service clients using WTF-PAD

2019-05-27 Thread George Kadianakis
David Goulet writes: > On 16 May (14:20:05), George Kadianakis wrote: > > Hello! > >> 4.1. A dive into general circuit construction sequences [CIRCCONSTRUCTION] >> >>In this section we give an overview of how circuit construction looks like >>to a network or guard-level adversary. We

Re: [tor-dev] Proposal 302: Hiding onion service clients using WTF-PAD

2019-05-21 Thread David Goulet
On 16 May (14:20:05), George Kadianakis wrote: Hello! > 4.1. A dive into general circuit construction sequences [CIRCCONSTRUCTION] > >In this section we give an overview of how circuit construction looks like >to a network or guard-level adversary. We use this knowledge to make the >

Re: [tor-dev] Proposal 302: Hiding onion service clients using WTF-PAD

2019-05-20 Thread teor
> On 21 May 2019, at 00:35, George Kadianakis wrote: > > Tom Ritter writes: > >>> On Thu, 16 May 2019 at 11:20, George Kadianakis >>> wrote: >>>3) Duration of Activity ("DoA") >>> >>> The USENIX paper uses the period of time during which circuits send and >>> receive cells to

Re: [tor-dev] Proposal 302: Hiding onion service clients using WTF-PAD

2019-05-20 Thread George Kadianakis
Tom Ritter writes: > On Thu, 16 May 2019 at 11:20, George Kadianakis wrote: >> 3) Duration of Activity ("DoA") >> >> The USENIX paper uses the period of time during which circuits send and >> receive cells to distinguish circuit types. For example, client-side >>

Re: [tor-dev] Proposal 302: Hiding onion service clients using WTF-PAD

2019-05-16 Thread Tom Ritter
On Thu, 16 May 2019 at 11:20, George Kadianakis wrote: > 3) Duration of Activity ("DoA") > > The USENIX paper uses the period of time during which circuits send and > receive cells to distinguish circuit types. For example, client-side > introduction circuits are really