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Limits of Anonymity in Open Environments
Written by:
Dogan Kesdogan,
Dakshi Agrawal,
and Stefan Penz.
Citation:
Revised papers from the 5th international workshop on information hiding, IH 2002, LNCS 2578, pp. 53-69, 2002.
Copyright © (2002) by Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract:
A user is only anonymous within a set of other users. Hence, the
core functionality of an anonymity providing technique is to
establish an anonymity set. In open environments, such as the
Internet, the established anonymity sets in the whole are
observable and change with every anonymous communication. We use
this fact of changing anonymity sets and present a model where we
can determine the protection limit of an anonymity technique, i.e.
the number of observations required for an attacker to "break"
uniquely a given anonymity technique. In this paper, we use the
popular MIX method to demonstrate our attack. The MIX method forms
the basis of most of the today's deployments of anonymity services
(e.g. Freedom, Onion Routing, Webmix). We note that our approach
is general and can be applied equally well to other anonymity
providing techniques.
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