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145 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
145 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
LLARP - Low Latency Anon Routing Protocol
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TL;DR edition: an onion router with a tun interface for transporting ip packets
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anonymously between you and the internet and internally inside itself to other users.
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This document describes the high level outline of LLARP, specific all the
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project's goals, non-goals and network architecture from a bird's eye view.
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Preface:
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Working on I2P has been a really big learning experience for everyone involved.
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After much deliberation I have decided to start making a "next generation" onion
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routing protocol. Specifically LLARP is (currently) a research project
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to explore the question:
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"What if I2P was made in the current year (2018)? What would be different?"
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Project Non Goals:
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This project does not attempt to solve traffic shape correlation or active nation
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state sponsored network attacks. The former is an inherit property of low latency
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computer networks that I personally do not think is possible to properly fully
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"solve". The latter is a threat that lies outside the scope of what the current
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toolset that is available to me at the moment provides.
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This project does not attempt to be a magical application level cure-all for
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application or end user security. At the end of the day that is a problem that
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exists between chair and keyboard.
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The Single Project Goal:
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LLARP is a protocol suite meant to anonymize IP by providing an anonymous
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network level (IPv4/IPv6) tunnel broker for both "hidden services" and
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communication back to "the clearnet" (the normal internet). Both hidden service
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and clearnet communication MUST permit both outbound and inbound traffic on the
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network level without any NAT (except for IPv4 in which NAT is permitted due to
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lack of address availability).
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In short We want to permit both anonymous exit and entry network level traffic
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between LLARP enabled networks and the internet.
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Rationale for starting over:
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Despite Tor Project's best efforts to popularize Tor use, Tor2Web seems to be
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widely popular for people who do not wish to opt into the ecosystem. My proposed
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solution would be to permit inbound traffic from "exit nodes" in addition to
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allowing outbound exit traffic. I have no ideas on how this could be done with
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the existing protocols in Tor or if it is possible or advisable to attempt such
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as I am not familiar with their ecosystem.
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I2P could have been used as a medium for encrypted anonymous IP transit but the
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current network has issues with latency and throughput. Rebasing I2P atop more
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modern cryptography has been going on internally inside I2P for at least 5 years
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with less progress than desired. Like some before me, I have concluded that it
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would be faster to redo the whole stack "the right way" than to wait for I2P to
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finish rebasing. That being said, nothing is preventing I2P from be used for
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encrypted anonymous IP transit traffic in a future where I2P finishes their
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protocol migrations, I just don't want to wait.
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In short, I want to take the "best parts" from Tor and I2P and make a new
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protocol suite.
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For both Tor and I2P I have 2 categories for the attributes they have.
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the good
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the bad and the ugly
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The good (I2P):
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I2P aims to provide an anonymous unspoofable load balanced network layer.
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I want this feature.
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I2P is trust agile, it does not have any hard coded trusts in its network
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architecture. Even network boostrap can be done from a single router if the user
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desires to (albeit this is currently ill advised).
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I want this feature.
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The good (Tor):
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Tor embraces the reality of the current internet infrastructure by having a
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client/server architecture. This allows very low barriers of entry in using the
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Tor network and a higher barrier of entry for contributing routing
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infrastructure. This promotes a healthy network shape of high capacity servers
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serving low capacity clients that "dangle off of the side" of the network.
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I want this feature.
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The bad and the ugly (I2P):
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Bad: I2P uses old cryptography, specially 2048 bit ElGamal using non standard primes.
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The use of ElGamal is so pervasive throughout the I2P protocol stack that it
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exists at every level of it. Removing it is a massive task that is taking a long
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LONG time.
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I don't want this feature.
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Ugly: I2P cannot currently mitigate most sybil attacks with their current network
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architecture. Recently I2P has added some blocklist solutions signed by release
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signers but this probably won't scale in the event of a "big" attack. In
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addition I2P isn't staffed for such attacks either.
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This is a hard problem to solve that the Loki network may be able to help
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with by creating a financial barrier to running multiple a relays.
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The bad and the ugly (Tor):
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Bad: Tor is strictly TCP oriented.
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I don't want this feature.
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