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Informing Protocol Design Through Crowdsourcing: the Case of Pervasive Encryption

Published: 17 August 2015 Publication History

Abstract

Middleboxes, such as proxies, firewalls and NATs play an important role in the modern Internet ecosystem. On one hand, they perform advanced functions, e.g. traffic shaping, security or enhancing application performance. On the other hand, they turn the Internet into a hostile ecosystem for innovation, as they limit the deviation from deployed protocols. It is therefore essential, when designing a new protocol, to first understand its interaction with the elements of the path. The emerging area of crowdsourcing solutions can help to shed light on this issue. Such approach allows us to reach large and different sets of users and also different types of devices and networks to perform Internet measurements. In this paper, we show how to make informed protocol design choices by using a crowdsourcing platform. We consider a specific use case, namely the case of pervasive encryption in the modern Internet. Given the latest public disclosures of the NSA global surveillance operations, the issue of privacy in the Internet became of paramount importance. Internet community efforts are thus underway to increase the adoption of encryption. Using a crowdsourcing approach, we perform large-scale TLS measurements to advance our understanding on whether wide adoption of encryption is possible in today's Internet.

References

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A. Bittau et al. The case for ubiquitous transport-level encryption. In USENIX, 2010.
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A. Doan et al. Crowdsourcing systems on the world-wide web. ACM, 2011.
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S. Farrell et al. Pervasive monitoring is an attack. Technical report, RFC 7258, May, 2014.
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F. Gont et al. Transmission and processing of IPv6 options. Technical report, IETF draft-gont-6man-ipv6-opt-transmit-01, 2015.
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M. Handley. Why the internet only just works. BT Technology Journal, 2006.
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D. Naylor et al. The cost of the "S" in HTTPS. In ACM, CoNEXT, 2014.

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    cover image ACM Conferences
    C2B(1)D '15: Proceedings of the 2015 ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Crowdsourcing and Crowdsharing of Big (Internet) Data
    August 2015
    58 pages
    ISBN:9781450335393
    DOI:10.1145/2787394
    Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

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    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 17 August 2015

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    Author Tags

    1. TLS
    2. crowdsourcing
    3. internet measurements
    4. middleboxes

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    • Research-article

    Funding Sources

    • EU FP7 METRICS
    • EU FP7 Trilogy2

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    SIGCOMM '15
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    SIGCOMM '15: ACM SIGCOMM 2015 Conference
    August 17, 2015
    London, United Kingdom

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