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Security Analysis of Accountable Anonymity in Dissent
Author(s) -
Ewa Syta,
Henry Corrigan-Gibbs,
Shu-Chun Weng,
David Isaac Wolinsky,
Bryan Ford,
Aaron Johnson
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
acm transactions on information and system security
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1557-7406
pISSN - 1094-9224
DOI - 10.1145/2629621
Subject(s) - anonymity , computer science , computer security , dissent , internet privacy , protocol (science) , denial of service attack , the internet , group signature , world wide web , encryption , public key cryptography , law , political science , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , politics
Users often wish to communicate anonymously on the Internet, for example, in group discussion or instant messaging forums. Existing solutions are vulnerable to misbehaving users, however, who may abuse their anonymity to disrupt communication. Dining Cryptographers Networks (DC-nets) leave groups vulnerable to denial-of-service and Sybil attacks; mix networks are difficult to protect against traffic analysis; and accountable voting schemes are unsuited to general anonymous messaging. dissent is the first general protocol offering provable anonymity and accountability for moderate-size groups, while efficiently handling unbalanced communication demands among users. We present an improved and hardened dissent protocol, define its precise security properties, and offer rigorous proofs of these properties. The improved protocol systematically addresses the delicate balance between provably hiding the identities of well-behaved users, while provably revealing the identities of disruptive users, a challenging task because many forms of misbehavior are inherently undetectable. The new protocol also addresses several nontrivial attacks on the original dissent protocol stemming from subtle design flaws.

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