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Privacy Watch: Tor

torWith the nonsense on Capitol Hill this week, and discussion of DMCA revision and funding ramping up, I thought it would be a good time to talk about Tor, the award-winning privacy protocol and software from the EFF. Unlike other anonymizers that work by encrypting or proxying particular services and protocols, Tor's TLS-over-onion routing scheme works by re-routing all TCP traffic through a complex network of Tor nodes. Packets, including routing information, are encrypted between each node and each node has access to only very limited information about the next hop. Furthermore, packets pass through a random number of nodes (the more the merrier) and not all packets from a single session need follow the same route. This makes it very, very difficult (it's tempting to say impossible, but that's probably not quite true) to trace the ultimate origin or destination of any packet on the network unless the contents of the packet divulge revealing information.

There are drawbacks, of course. Although the onion routing algorithms are good, onion routing certainly has the potential for higher latency that traditional RIP and OSPF routing. Tor is also not an end-to-end solution. If the ultimate destination of a packet is a machine that doesn't support Tor, the packet is in the open from the time it leaves the Tor exit point and using traditional end-to-end encrytption on top of Tor is advisable.

The gains are significant, though, and as the protocol becomes more widely adopted the advantages will become even more pronounced. Aside from privacy protection, Tor's "next hop" TLS encryption virtually eliminates the potential for traditional "man in the middle" attacks within the network because such attacks rely on knowing the origin and destination of packets, and capturing a usable data stream. Tor, particularly if combined with end-to-end encryption, also makes encrypted data less susceptible to brute force attacks; it is much more difficult to capture a complete data stream, and data is encrypted multiple times with short-lived session keys.

Even though Tor is still in beta, it's well worth a download (The Windows version already won a PCWorld "Best Products of 2005, Security" Award). Take a look, and if you have a public IP, think about setting up a server.

Tip of the Day

To get an instant map to any address, just go to your Address Book and right click on the address field of any one of your contacts and select "Map Of." The address will then be revealed in Google Maps on Safari. You can do the same if a data detector determines there is an address in an e-mail in Mail.


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