Active Protocols for Agile Censor-Resistant Networks
Robert Ricci
and Jay Lepreau
May 2001
Flux Research Group
School of Computing
University of Utah
50 S. Central Campus Drive Rm. 3190
Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-9205 USA
Abstract
In this paper we argue that content distribution in the
face of censorship is a compelling and feasible
application of active networking. In the face of a
determined and powerful adversary, every fixed protocol
can become known and subsequently monitored, blocked, or
its member nodes identified and attacked. Frequent and
diverse protocol change is key to allowing information to
continue to flow. Typically, decentralized and
locally-customized protocol evolution is also an important
aspect in providing censor-resistance.
A programmable overlay network can provide this type of
manually-initiated protocol diversification. We have
prototyped such an extension to Freenet, a peer-to-peer
storage and retrieval system whose goals include censor
resistance and anonymity for information publishers and
consumers.
Full paper
presented at and appears in Proceedings of the
Eighth IEEE Workshop on
Hot Topics in Operating Systems, May 2001:
The slides from the HotOS talk are available as:
The thesis
underlying this paper is also available (August 2001).