LIRA: Lightweight Incentivized Routing for Anonymity

Abstract

Tor, the most popular deployed distributed onion routing network, suffers from performance and scalability problems stemming from a lack of incentives for volunteers to contribute. Insufficient capacity limits scalability and harms the anonymity of its users. We introduce LIRA, a lightweight scheme that creates performance incentives for users to contribute bandwidth resources to the Tor network. LIRA uses a novel cryptographic lottery: winners may be guessed with tunable probability by any user or bought in exchange for resource contributions. The traffic of those winning the lottery is prioritized through Tor. The uncertainty of whether a buyer or a guesser is getting priority improves the anonymity of those purchasing winners while the performance incentives encourage contribution. LIRA is more lightweight than prior reward schemes that pay for service and provides better anonymity than schemes that simply give priority to traffic originating from fast relays. We analyze LIRA's efficiency, anonymity, and incentives, present a prototype implementation, and describe experiments that show it indeed improves performance for those servicing the network.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 01, 2013
Accession Number
ADA603297

Entities

People

  • Aaron M. Johnson
  • Paul Syverson
  • Rob Jansen

Organizations

  • United States Naval Research Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Anonymous Communications
  • Bandwidth
  • Communication Systems
  • Computer Networks
  • Computer Programs
  • Construction
  • Efficiency
  • Electronic Messaging
  • Internet Routing
  • Lightweight
  • Models
  • Motivation
  • Probability
  • Prototypes
  • Routing
  • Security
  • Transport Protocols

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Computer Networking
  • Systems Analysis and Design