Hi, Tom:

1)    "Your argument seems to be that we shouldn't bother with things like security or encryption at all :-) ...    ":    My apologies for getting you to an unexpected conclusion. Perhaps I failed to make an explicit statement because I thought that I was following a thread about the IPv4 or IPv6 addresses "scrambling" schemes for protecting the privacy of or increasing the security to users. That is, we should look at this subject by the "Divide & Conquer" concept. In other words, I was saying that encrypting the "Content" part as much as the sender / receiver pair agrees to. But, keep the "Address" part mostly clear. This way, the LE parties will not have the excuse of performing "mass surveillance" by scooping up everything, then take time to digest and regurgitate the "Content" for hidden treasures. (Remember the report that the German Chancellor's telephone calls were picked up by spy agencies?) Rumors have been, that high performance computer and large capacity storage device manufacturers are having a field day supplying equipment to LE organizations such as NSA because the current Internet trend.

2)    Since my engineering training started from RF (Radio Frequency or Wireless -- actually all bands from audio all the way to 60+ GHz), then telephony, and cellular phone before getting involved with the Internet, allow me to briefly describe my understanding of the characteristics of each with respect to our current discussion. Hopefully, the below can thread different fields together to clarify my point:

    A.    In the RF field, any signal that is transmitted (sent) into the "ether" is a fair game for everyone. So, there is no "Address" in the basic RF signal transmission. Most RF equipment does not transmit its identification by itself unless the user does so as part of the "Content" on purpose. For example, acommercial (AM, FM, TV) station announces its station ID, or call-sign (Address) as part of the broadcast (Content) according to FCC Rules. So, in RF communication, we concentrate only on encrypting the "Content" (such as scrambled / encode speech) for proprietary applications.

    B.    For traditional land-line telephony services, the caller's phone number (Address) is fixed by wiring (nailed up) upon subscription. Only the called party's phone number (Addressee) is dialed once to tell the switching system who is the destination party, so that the switches can make the connection. Once the called party answers, the actual session consists of only "Content" exchanges, no more "Address" information necessary. Speech scramblers may be used on either end as a pair, for private conversation (Content).

    C.   RF signals from cellular mobile phone do carry the handset (and the cell tower) identifications (Addresses) on both ends without the user's knowledge to facilitate establishing and maintaining a connection, while the user constantly crosses the boundaries between cells. Similarly, speech scramblers may be used on either end as a pair for private conversation (Content). Note that since VoIP is behind the scene these days, cellular mobile service is supported by a mixture of both the traditional telephony and the Internet infrastructures.

    D.   If we look at the Internet environment itself, it is kind like the cellular mobile phone service. It is inherently wide open like RF because packets are forwarded by unstructured mesh routers allowing everyone to listen in. Yet, each IP packet header carries the Addresses of both ends for directing routers to deliver the packet, as well as for the return packet. So, how much can a sender "hide" the identities of either or both ends for privacy while still enables the routers to deliver the packet to its intended destination effectively is a real challenge. Whatever the scheme chosen, it can not be too sophisticated to over-burden the routers which means that it is probably mot much a challenge for a perpetrator intentionally trying to crack the scheme.

3)    My sense from the above analysis is that attempting to make the "Address" part of an IP packet "cryptic" for improving the privacy / security properties of the "Content" is probably futile. The more we attempt doing it, the stronger the LEs' argument for mass surveillance, even though they probably already knew the solution.

4)    On the other hand, if we push too hard on strengthening the encryption of the "Content" without a back door, we essentially are helping the perpetrators. This is because if this part worked, the LEs will not be able to monitor and catch the criminals!

5)    So, we need to review the pros and cons of the end results, before jumping into a scheme.


Happy New Year!



Abe (2021-12-31 11:57 EST)



On 2021-12-30 13:29, Tom Herbert wrote:


On Mon, Dec 27, 2021 at 7:00 PM Abraham Y. Chen <ayc...@avinta.com> wrote:

    Hi, YiHao:

    0)    Hope you had a Merry Christmas as well!

    1)    Re: Ur. Pts 1) & 2): Allow me to modify and expand your
    definitions of the abbreviations, ICP & ISP, a bit to streamline
    our discussion, then focusing on related meanings of the two
    keyword prefixes, "C" and "A" in the middle of them:

        A.    ICP (Internet Content Provider):    This is the same as
    you are using.

        B.    IAP (Internet Access Provider):    This will represent
    the ISP that you are referring to.

        C.    ISP (Internet Service Provider):    This will be used as
    the general expression that covers both ICP and IAP above.

        With these, I agree in general with your analysis.

    2)    From the above, there is a simpler (layman's instead of
    engineer's) way to look at this riddle. Let's consider the old
    fashioned postal service. A letter itself is the "Content". The
    envelop has the "Address". The postal service cares only what is
    on the envelop. In fact, it is commonly practiced without
    explicitly identified that one letter may have multiple layers of
    envelops that each is opened by the "Addressee" who then forward
    the next "Addressee" according to the "Address" on the inside
    envelop, accordingly. To a larger scale, postal services put
    envelops destined to the same city in one bag. Then, bags destined
    to the same country in one container, etc. This process is refined
    to multiple levels depending on the volume of the mail and the
    facility (routes) available for delivery. Then, the containers are
    opened progressively along the destination route. No wonder that
    the US Postal Service claimed (during the early days of the
    Internet) that the mail system was the fist "packet switching"
    system.

    3)    So, in this analogy, the "Address" on each and every envelop
    has to be in the clear (not coded or encrypted in any sense) for
    the mail handlers to work with. It is only the most inner
    "Content", the letter itself, can have Confidential information
    (or encrypted if the sender wishes). Under this scenario, the LE
    (Law Enforcement) is allowed only to track suspected mail by the
    "Addresses". And, any specific surveillance is only authorized by
    court, case by case. While no one can prevent LE bypassing this
    procedure, cases built by violating this requirement would be the
    ground for being thrown out of the court.

    4)    However, in the Internet environment, largely, if not most,
    Addresses are dynamic. There is no way to specify an IP Address
    for surveillance of a suspect. This gives the LE the perfect
    excuse to scoop up everything and then analyze offline. This gives
    them plenty of time to try various ways to decrypt the encoded
    messages and the opportunity to sift through everything for
    incidental "surprise bonus finds". The result is that practically
    no privacy is left for anyone. is means that all of the schemes of
    scrambling IP Addresses are useless at the end. So, why do we
    bother with doing so, at all?


Abe,

Happy New Year!

Your argument seems to be that we shouldn't bother with things like security or encryption at all :-) While it's true that anything sent into the Internet can be intercepted and analyzed offline, it's clearly the intent of security and privacy mechanisms to make offline analysis of data ineffective or at least cost prohibitive. For encryption the calculation is pretty straightforward, the complexity and cost and breaking a cipher is generally correlated to the key size. So for any given key size, it can be determined what sort of resources are required to break the code. This is a continuous escalation as attackers gain access for more computational resources and there are breakthroughs like in quantum computing that require rethinking encryption.  But regardless, the effectiveness of encryption at any given point of time is quantifiable.

For security and privacy in IP addresses I believe we should be similarly taking a quantitative approach. This is where RFC7721 fails. The recommendation of RFC7721 is that for better security, use temporary addresses with shorter lifetimes. But the RFC doesn't attempt to quantify the relationship between address lifetime and the security that's offered or even say what specific lifetime is recommended for optimal security. For instance, if the user changes their interface address twice a day instead of once a day does that halve the chances that some may breach their security by correlating two different flows that they source from the user? Probably not. But, what if they change their address every five minutes? How much better is that than changing the address once a day? It's intuitive that it should be better security, but is it _really_ better? And if it is better, are the benefits worth the aggravation of changing the address. This is quite similar to some companies that have a policy that everyone needs to change their passwords periodically. Studies have shown that there is little quantitative value in doing this and in fact the net effect is likely less security and increased user aggravation-- even so, companies will continue to do this because it's easier to stick with the inertia of intuition.

The fix for the password problem is one time passwords (OTP) and IMO that hints at the fix for the address security problems described in RFC7712, essentially we need single use source addresses per each connection.  The security effects of single use addresses are quantifiable, i.e. given sample packets from independent two flows generated by the same user, without additional information it isn't possible for a third party to correlate that they are sourced by the same user.

Tom



    Happy New Year!


    Abe (2021-12-27 21:59)





    On 2021-12-23 22:26, Jiayihao wrote:

    Hello Abe,

    Users are unwilling to be watched by any parties(ISP, and ICP
    also) excepts users themselves. Actually I would like to divide
    the arguments into 2 case: network layers and below (not
    completely but mostly controlled by ISP); transport layers and
    above (not completely but mostly controlled by ICP).

    1) For transport layers and above, Encryption Everywhere (like
    TLS) is a good tool to provide user privacy. However, it is only
    a tool against ISPs, while ICPs survive and keep gaining revenue
    (even by selling data like the negative news of Facebook, or
    Meta, whatever you call it). As discussed, it is not networks
    faults because IP provides peer-to-peer already. You may blame
    CGNAT in ISP increasingly contributes to a C/S mode in replacing
    P2P, like in China where IPv4 addresses are scare and CGNAT is
    almost everywhere. However, I don’t find the situation any better
    in U.S. where most of IPv4 address are located. It is a business
    choice to overwrite the mode to be peer-ICP-peer(C/S mode) at
    application layer, other than utilize the P2P mode that natively
    provided by IP.

    In this case, there are trust points and they are ICPs.

    2) For network layers and below, ISP and IP still provide a pure
    P2P network, and Encryption in TLS do not blind ISP in IP layer
    since IP header is still in plaintext and almost controlled by
    ISP. That is to say, in an access network scenario, the access
    network provide can see every trace of every user at network
    layer level (although exclude the encrypted payload). To against
    this, one can use Proxy(i.e., VPN, Tor) to bypass the trace
    analysis just like the CGNAT does. The only difference is that
    detour points (Proxies) belong to a third party, not ISP.

    In this case, there are trust points and they are third party
    proxies.

    The bottom line is that trust points are everywhere explicitly or
    implicitly, and privacy can be leaked from every (trust) point
    that you trust (or have business with). No matter what network
    system you have, no matter it is PSTN or ATM, these trust points
    are just the weak points for your privacy, and the only things
    users can beg is that **ALL** trust points are 1) well
    behave/don’t be evil; 2)system is advanced enough that can’t be
    hacked by any others; 3) protected by law.

    I would say pretty challenging and also expecting to reach that.

    Network itself just cannot be bypassed in reaching that.

    Merry Christmas,

    Yihao

    *From:* Abraham Y. Chen <ayc...@avinta.com>
    <mailto:ayc...@avinta.com>
    *Sent:* 2021年12月23日 10:01
    *To:* Jiayihao <jiayi...@huawei.com> <mailto:jiayi...@huawei.com>
    *Cc:* t...@herbertland.com; int-area@ietf.org
    *Subject:* Re: [Int-area] Where/How is the features innovation,
    happening? Re: 202112221726.AYC
    *Importance:* High

    Hi, YiHao:

    0)    I am glad that you distilled the complex and elusive
    privacy / security tradeoff issues to a very unique and concise
    perspective.

    1)    Yes, the IPv4 CG-NAT and IPv6 Temporary address may seem to
    provide some privacy protection. However, with the availability
    of the computing power, these (and others such as VPN) approaches
    may be just ostrich mentality.  On the other hand, they provide
    the perfect excuse for the government (at least US) to justify
    for "mass surveillance". For example, the following is a recent
    news report which practically defeats all current "privacy
    protection" attempts.

    
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2021/12/08/federal-court-upholds-terrorism-conviction-mass-surveillance-case/6440325001/

    */[jiayihao] there is no doubt./*

    2)    Rather than contradicting efforts, it is time to review
    whether any of these schemes such as mapping techniques really is
    effective for the perceived "protection". As much of the current
    science fiction type crime scene detective novel / movie / TV
    program hinted, the government probably has more capability to
    zero-in on anyone than an ordinary citizen can imagine, anyway.
    And, businesses have gathered more information about us than they
    will ever admit. Perhaps we should "think out of the box" by
    going back to the PSTN days of definitive subscriber
    identification systems, so that accordingly we will behave
    appropriately on the Internet, and the government will be allowed
    to only monitor suspected criminals by filing explicit (although
    in secret) requests, case by case, to the court for approval?

    Happy Holidays!

    Abe (2021-12-22 21:00 EST)

    Hello Tom,
The privacy countermeasure for IPv4/IPv6 is interestingly different.
    IPv4 usually utilize CGNAT, i.e., M(hosts)-to-N(IPs), where M >> N so that 
the host could remain anonymous
    IPv6 usually utilize Temporary address, i.e., 1(host)-to-M(IPs[at least suffix 
level]), where M >> 1 so that the host could remain anonymous.
HOWEVER, I don't feel any approach reaches privacy perfectly, because access network have a global perspective on M-to-N or 1-to-M mapping.
    For this, it is hard to be convinced that IPv4/6 itself can reach a perfect 
privacy.
Thanks,
    Yihao Jia
----------- I believe CGNAT is better than IPv6 in terms of privacy in addressing.
    In fact one might argue that IPv4 provides better privacy and security
    than IPv6 in this regard. Temporary addresses are not single use which
    means the attacker can correlate addresses from a user between
    unrelated flows during the quantum the temporary address is used. When
    a user changes their address, the attacker can continue monitoring if
    it is signaled that the address changed. Here is a fairly simple
    exploit I derived to do that (from
    draft-herbert-ipv6-prefix-address-privacy-00).
The exploit is:
           o An attacker creates an "always connected" app that provides some
             seemingly benign service and users download the app.
           o The app includes some sort of persistent identity. For instance,
             this could be an account login.
           o The backend server for the app logs the identity and IP address
             of a user each time they connect
           o When an address change happens, existing connections on the user
             device are disconnected. The app will receive a notification and
             immediately attempt to reconnect using the new source address.
           o The backend server will see the new connection and log the new
             IP address as being associated with the specific user. Thus,
    the server has
             a real-time record of users and the IP address they are using.
           o The attacker intercepts packets at some point in the Internet.
             The addresses in the captured packets can be time correlated
             with the server database to deduce identities of parties in
             communications that are unrelated to the app.
The only way I see to mitigate this sort of surveillance is single use
    addresses. That is effectively what  CGNAT can provide.
Tom

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