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The goal of Coin Flipping Request Delegation (CFRD) is to add plausible deniability of routing and lookup requests in P2P networks, with special emphasis on DHT networks. The CFRD lookup protocol works by probabilistically creating a new lookup from a received routing request.
CFRD in Kademlia DHT
In a Kademlia lookup request (as defined by these specs), the lookup initiator creates an ordered shortlist containing k peers closest to the ID of the contentID requested. The shortlist is ordered by proximity and is first populated with peers in the initiator's bucket list. Each iteration of the protocol consists of selecting α of the closest peers to the contentID in the shortlist and issue in parallel a FIND_VALUE request to them. The responses contain a set of the closest peers of each of the peers which that received the FIND_VALUE request. This information is added to the shortlist in a way that it maintains its order (i.e. first peers are closer to the contentID). This protocol proceeds until 1) a peer responds with STORE message (value found); 2) an iteration in which no new peer is added to the shortlist (value not found) and; 3) lookup timeout.
The CFRD construction transforms FIND_VALUE requests into new FIND_VALUE requests in a probabilistic way. When a peer receives a FIND_VALUE request, it will flip a coin to decide whether to respond to the request or instead start a lookup request itself. Once the lookup is resolved by the new peer (which is not the original initiator), it will cache the content and reply to the peer which initially asked for the content with a STORE message.
This mechanism adds plausible deniability to DHT lookups, since (privacy) adversaries monitoring network requests (locally and to a certain threshold) will not be able to distinguish between original content lookups from lookups that were initiated because of the CFRD mechanism. This mechanism aims at decoupling peer behaviour (network request) from user behaviour (interests and personal behaviour).
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Coin Flipping Request Delegation
The goal of Coin Flipping Request Delegation (CFRD) is to add plausible deniability of routing and lookup requests in P2P networks, with special emphasis on DHT networks. The CFRD lookup protocol works by probabilistically creating a new lookup from a received routing request.
CFRD in Kademlia DHT
In a Kademlia lookup request (as defined by these specs), the lookup initiator creates an ordered shortlist containing
k
peers closest to the ID of the contentID requested. The shortlist is ordered by proximity and is first populated with peers in the initiator's bucket list. Each iteration of the protocol consists of selectingα
of the closest peers to the contentID in the shortlist and issue in parallel aFIND_VALUE
request to them. The responses contain a set of the closest peers of each of the peers which that received theFIND_VALUE
request. This information is added to the shortlist in a way that it maintains its order (i.e. first peers are closer to the contentID). This protocol proceeds until 1) a peer responds withSTORE
message (value found); 2) an iteration in which no new peer is added to the shortlist (value not found) and; 3) lookup timeout.The CFRD construction transforms
FIND_VALUE
requests into newFIND_VALUE
requests in a probabilistic way. When a peer receives aFIND_VALUE
request, it will flip a coin to decide whether to respond to the request or instead start a lookup request itself. Once the lookup is resolved by the new peer (which is not the original initiator), it will cache the content and reply to the peer which initially asked for the content with aSTORE
message.This mechanism adds plausible deniability to DHT lookups, since (privacy) adversaries monitoring network requests (locally and to a certain threshold) will not be able to distinguish between original content lookups from lookups that were initiated because of the CFRD mechanism. This mechanism aims at decoupling peer behaviour (network request) from user behaviour (interests and personal behaviour).
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: