CS Table, Friday, February 20: Onion routing
Computer Science 2015-07-01
Summary:
This week in CS Table, we will consider a widely used technique for using Internet services anonymously: onion routing. The leading free implementation of onion routing is Tor. The Tor Project provides a variety of software packages incorporating or building on this technique, of which the best known is the Tor browser, a Firefox derivative that uses onion routing for interactions with Web servers.
The readings are:
- Tor Project. 2015. Tor: overview. https://www.torproject.org/about/overview.html.en
- Reed, M. G., and Syverson, P. F. 1999. Onion routing [abstract only]. Prepared for the 1999 Symposium on Advanced Information Processing and Analysis. http://www.onion-router.net/Publications/AIPA-1999.pdf
- Dingledine, R., Mathewson, N., and Syverson, P. 2004. Tor: the second-generation onion router. Proceedings of the 13th USENIX Security Symposium. http://www.onion-router.net/Publications/tor-design.pdf
Packets containing copies of these readings are available on the bench near Noyce 3821.
There is also one optional reading (on-line only):
- Anderson, M. 2014. 81% of Tor users can be de-anonymized by analyzing router information, research indicates. http://thestack.com/chakravarty-tor-traffic-analysis-141114
Computer Science Table is a weekly meeting of Grinnell College community members (students, faculty, staff, etc.) interested in discussing topics related to computing and computer science. CS Table meets Fridays from 12:10 to 12:50 in the Day PDR (JRC 224A). Contact Sam Rebelsky, rebelsky@grinnell.edu, for the weekly reading. Students on meal plans, faculty, and staff are expected to cover the cost of their meals. Visitors to the College and students not on meal plans can charge their meals to the department.