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Traffic analysis

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Traffic analysis is the process of intercepting and examining messages in order to deduce information from patterns in communication. It can be performed even when the messages are encrypted and cannot be decrypted. In general, the greater the number of messages observed, or even intercepted and stored, the more that can be inferred from the traffic. Traffic analysis can be performed in the context of military intelligence or counter-intelligence, and is a concern in computer security.

Traffic analysis tasks may be supported by dedicated computer software programs, including commercially available programs such as those offered by i2, Visual Analytics, Memex, Orion Scientific, Pacific Northwest National Labs, and others. Advanced traffic analysis techniques may include various forms of social network analysis.

In military intelligence

In a military context, traffic analysis is usually performed by a signals intelligence agency, and can be a source of information about the intentions and actions of the enemy. Examples patterns include:

In computer security

Traffic analysis is also a concern in computer security. An attacker can gain important information by monitoring, for example, the frequency and timing of network packets. For example, a timing attack on the SSH protocol used timing information to deduce information about passwords (Song et al, 2001). For interactive sessions, SSH transmits a message after each key stroke. The timings between messages can be studied using hidden Markov models, and the authors estimate that it can be used to recover the password fifty times faster than a brute force attack.

Traffic analysis can also be used for attack on anonymous communication systems, like the Tor anonymity network. Steven J. Murdoch and George Danezis from University of Cambridge presented this in an article [Low-Cost Traffic Analysis of Tor], presented in 2005 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, Oakland, California, USA, May 8 – 11, 2005. They presented traffic-analysis techniques that allow adversaries with only a partial view of the network to infer which nodes are being used to relay the anonymous streams and therefore greatly reduce the anonymity provided by Tor. They have also shown that otherwise unrelated streams can be linked back to the same initiator.

Remailer systems can also be attacked via traffic analysis. If a message is observed going to a remailing server, and an identical length (if now anonymized) message is observed leaving that server shortly thereafter, a traffic analyst may be able (automatically) to pierce the anonymity of that sender by connecting the sender with the ultimate receiver. Several variations in remailer operation have been developed which can make such analysis much less informative.

Countermeasures

It is difficult to completely eliminate traffic analysis: "It is extremely hard to hide information such as the size or the timing of the messages. The known solutions require Alice to send a continuous stream of messages at the maximum bandwidth she will ever use...This might be acceptable for military applications, but it is not acceptable for most civilian applications." (Ferguson and Schneier, 2003).

The usefulness of traffic analysis can be reduced if traffic is faked or if traffic cannot be intercepted.

Both occurred in the period before the attack on Pearl Harbor (December 7, 1941):

Examples

See also

References

 


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