Deanonymizing Users of the SafeWeb Anonymizing Service


Autoria(s): Martin, David; Schulman, Andrew
Data(s)

20/10/2011

20/10/2011

11/01/2002

Resumo

The SafeWeb anonymizing system has been lauded by the press and loved by its users; self-described as "the most widely used online privacy service in the world," it served over 3,000,000 page views per day at its peak. SafeWeb was designed to defeat content blocking by firewalls and to defeat Web server attempts to identify users, all without degrading Web site behavior or requiring users to install specialized software. In this article we describe how these fundamentally incompatible requirements were realized in SafeWeb's architecture, resulting in spectacular failure modes under simple JavaScript attacks. These exploits allow adversaries to turn SafeWeb into a weapon against its users, inflicting more damage on them than would have been possible if they had never relied on SafeWeb technology. By bringing these problems to light, we hope to remind readers of the chasm that continues to separate popular and technical notions of security.

Privacy Foundation; Boston University

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1650

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Boston University Computer Science Department

Relação

BUCS Technical Reports;BUCS-TR-2002-003

Palavras-Chave #Censorship #Privacy #Anonymity #Cookies #Internet #Web #Firewall #JavaScript #SafeWeb #PrivaSec
Tipo

Technical Report