Even if you have encrypted your traffic with a VPN (or the Tor Network), advanced traffic analysis is a growing threat against your privacy. Therefore, we now introduce DAITA.

Through constant packet sizes, random background traffic and data pattern distortion we are taking the first step in our battle against sophisticated traffic analysis.

  • @jet@hackertalks.com
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    28 months ago

    I’m afraid just generating random traffic from your IP address won’t do anything against traffic flow analysis. Because most internet traffic is point to point, people who are interested in the flow, just follow the traffic moving between various points. So if you’re sending extra traffic to other random sites, it doesn’t interfere with point-to-point flow analysis.

    In the context of a VPN, because all of your traffic is encrypted, you have to work harder to determine what traffic is going where. Because all traffic is going from your network to another virtual network. So an outside observer just sees the size and frequency of traffic but not the destinations. In this context since they don’t see the destinations, it makes sense to add random traffic flows, because that’ll obscure the signal that the observers are looking for.

    • @MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world
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      28 months ago

      Considering that VPNs are Point-to-point too (home->VPN), I was wondering if one could use DAITA with TCP directly instead of having to use a VPN. Imagine if TCP had DAITA baked in.

      • @jet@hackertalks.com
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        8 months ago

        Even if you baked in variable packet size into TCP. It would be trivial for anybody monitoring network flow, to see you who you’re talking to. There would be no ambiguity.

        The only reason this makes sense for a VPN, is there’s a lot of traffic bundled together, so a third party doesn’t actually know where your traffic flow is going.

        Consider the example if you ran your own personal VPN endpoint. So you were the only user on the VPN. Even with randomized traffic flow injected into your VPN connection, it would be trivial for any third party who’s monitoring traffic flow to know that traffic is yours. Because you’re the only VPN connection talking to the VPN server. This thought experiment applies when you don’t have a VPN at all.

        • @MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world
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          28 months ago

          If I were to send packets to a single entity over time, I’d have no use for DAITA. I agree with you on this.

          However, let’s say that I run a bunch of VPN endpoints across VPSes, and the entity trying to track me doesn’t know about all of these IP ranges. I could be renting from a colo, the cloud and even a a bunch of friends who have their ports open. If I were to mix this in with my usual internet traffic, it becomes significantly harder for third-parties to figure out what I’m doing connecting to all of these different IPs. A state actor could put the resources behind it, but the average third-party will have a hard time with it. I can certainly see use-cases for it.

          • @jet@hackertalks.com
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            28 months ago

            I think we’re mixing up vocabulary.

            Every IP you talk to is visible to anybody monitoring your network. The sale of net flow data is commonly acknowledged by ISPs. So every computer you talk to is common knowledge for sale.

            In your scenario, let’s say you have five VPN connections set up to go to five endpoints that you control. But if nobody else is using those same endpoints. Your net flow data still exposes exactly what you’re doing. There’s no ambiguity. Your traffic is plainly obvious to anybody observing the network. Even if those VPN connections are adding randomized traffic onto the links.

            • @MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world
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              18 months ago

              Except that I will not necessarily be connecting to the exact same IPs over time, just going to do so in specific ranges which the VPS/colo owns. There’s plenty of people who are going to be renting VPSes and will have their traffic originate from the same IP range as mine, which means that if everybody using TCP had their traffic anonymized like so, the third party wouldn’t actually know that MigratingToLemmy specifically was connecting to AWS at a certain time and from a certain location, so to speak. This hypothesis doesn’t include correlation through other data in the threat model. But it could definitely prevent correlation with traffic across locations, which is similar to what Mullvad states