500 research outputs found

    Poseidon: Mitigating Interest Flooding DDoS Attacks in Named Data Networking

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    Content-Centric Networking (CCN) is an emerging networking paradigm being considered as a possible replacement for the current IP-based host-centric Internet infrastructure. In CCN, named content becomes a first-class entity. CCN focuses on content distribution, which dominates current Internet traffic and is arguably not well served by IP. Named-Data Networking (NDN) is an example of CCN. NDN is also an active research project under the NSF Future Internet Architectures (FIA) program. FIA emphasizes security and privacy from the outset and by design. To be a viable Internet architecture, NDN must be resilient against current and emerging threats. This paper focuses on distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks; in particular we address interest flooding, an attack that exploits key architectural features of NDN. We show that an adversary with limited resources can implement such attack, having a significant impact on network performance. We then introduce Poseidon: a framework for detecting and mitigating interest flooding attacks. Finally, we report on results of extensive simulations assessing proposed countermeasure.Comment: The IEEE Conference on Local Computer Networks (LCN 2013

    Software Grand Exposure: SGX Cache Attacks Are Practical

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    Side-channel information leakage is a known limitation of SGX. Researchers have demonstrated that secret-dependent information can be extracted from enclave execution through page-fault access patterns. Consequently, various recent research efforts are actively seeking countermeasures to SGX side-channel attacks. It is widely assumed that SGX may be vulnerable to other side channels, such as cache access pattern monitoring, as well. However, prior to our work, the practicality and the extent of such information leakage was not studied. In this paper we demonstrate that cache-based attacks are indeed a serious threat to the confidentiality of SGX-protected programs. Our goal was to design an attack that is hard to mitigate using known defenses, and therefore we mount our attack without interrupting enclave execution. This approach has major technical challenges, since the existing cache monitoring techniques experience significant noise if the victim process is not interrupted. We designed and implemented novel attack techniques to reduce this noise by leveraging the capabilities of the privileged adversary. Our attacks are able to recover confidential information from SGX enclaves, which we illustrate in two example cases: extraction of an entire RSA-2048 key during RSA decryption, and detection of specific human genome sequences during genomic indexing. We show that our attacks are more effective than previous cache attacks and harder to mitigate than previous SGX side-channel attacks

    Public key certificate privacy in VoNDN: voice over named data networks

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    Scenarios were scripted by the C++11 library in ndnSIM 2.6. The scenario implementations and required tools can be publicly accessible at the author’s GitHub account—https://git.io/JJqEwNamed Data Network (NDN) is a network paradigm that attempts to answer today's needs for distribution. One of the NDN key features is in-network caching to increase content distribution and network efficiency. However, this feature may increase the privacy concerns, as the adversary may identify the call history, and the callee/caller location through side-channel timing responses from the cache of trusted Voice over NDN (VoNDN) application routers. The side-channel timing attack can be mitigated by countermeasures, such as additional unpredictable delay, random caching, group signatures, and no-caching configurations. However, the content distribution may be affected by pre-configured countermeasures, which may be against the original purpose of NDN. In this work, the detection and defense (DaD) approach is proposed to mitigate the attack efficiently and effectively. With the DaD usage, an attack can be detected by a multi-level detection mechanism, in order to apply the countermeasures against the adversarial faces. Also, the detections can be used to determine the severity of the attack. In order to detect the behavior of an adversary, a brute-force timing attack was implemented and simulated of the VoNDN application on NDN-testbed. A trusted application that mimics the VoNDN and identifies the cached certificate on a worldwide NDN-testbed. In simulation primary results showed that the multi-level detection based on DaD mitigated the attack about 39.1% in best-route, and 36.5% in multicast communications. Additionally, the results showed that DaD preserves privacy without compromising the efficiency benefits of in-network caching in the VoNDN application.This work was supported by the Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT) within the Research and Development Units Project Scope under Grant UIDB/00319/2020

    Side-channel timing attack on content privacy of named data networking

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    Tese de Doutoramento em Engenharia Electrónica e de ComputadoresA diversity of current applications, such as Netflix, YouTube, and social media, have used the Internet mainly as a content distribution network. Named Data Networking (NDN) is a network paradigm that attempts to answer today’s applications need by naming the content. NDN promises an optimized content distribution through a named content-centric design. One of the NDN key features is the use of in-network caching to improve network efficiency in terms of content distribution. However, the cached contents may put the consumer privacy at risk. Since the time response of cached contents is different from un-cached contents, the adversary may distinguish the cached contents (targets) from un-cached ones, through the side-channel timing responses. The scope of attack can be towards the content, the name, or the signature. For instance, the adversary may obtain the call history, the callee or caller location on a trusted Voice over NDN (VoNDN) and the popularity of contents in streaming applications (e.g. NDNtube, NDNlive) through side-channel timing responses of the cache. The side-channel timing attack can be mitigated by manipulating the time of the router responses. The countermeasures proposed by other researches, such as additional delay, random/probabilistic caching, group signatures, and no-caching can effectively be used to mitigate the attack. However, the content distribution may be affected by pre-configured countermeasures which may go against the goal of the original NDN paradigm. In this work, the detection and defense (DaD) approach is proposed to mitigate the attack efficiently and effectively. With the DaD usage, an attack can be detected by a multi-level detection mechanism, in order to apply the countermeasures against the adversarial faces. Also, the detections can be used to determine the severity of the attack. In order to detect the behavior of an adversary, a brute-force timing attack was implemented and simulated with the following applications and testbeds: i. a trusted application that mimics the VoNDN and identifies the cached certificate on a worldwide NDN testbed, and ii. a streaming-like NDNtube application to identify the popularity of videos on the NDN testbed and AT&T company. In simulation primary results showed that the multi-level detection based on DaD mitigated the attack about 39.1% in best-route, and 36.6% in multicast communications. Additionally, the results showed that DaD preserves privacy without compromising the efficiency benefits of in-network caching in NDNtube and VoNDN applications.Várias aplicações atuais, como o Netflix e o YouTube, têm vindo a usar a Internet como uma rede de distribuição de conteúdos. O Named Data Networking (NDN) é um paradigma recente nas redes de comunicações que tenta responder às necessidades das aplicações modernas, através da nomeação dos conteúdos. O NDN promete uma otimização da distribuição dos conteúdos usando uma rede centrada nos conteúdos. Uma das características principais do NDN é o uso da cache disponivel nos nós da rede para melhorar a eficiência desta em termos de distribuição de conteúdos. No entanto, a colocação dos conteúdos em cache pode colocar em risco a privacidade dos consumidores. Uma vez que a resposta temporal de um conteúdo em cache é diferente do de um conteúdo que não está em cache, o adversário pode distinguir os conteúdos que estão em cache dos que não estão em cache, através das respostas de side-channel. O objectivo do ataque pode ser direcionado para o conteúdo, o nome ou a assinatura da mensagem. Por exemplo, o adversário pode obter o histórico de chamadas, a localização do callee ou do caller num serviço seguro de voz sobre NDN (VoNDN) e a popularidade do conteúdos em aplicações de streaming (e.g. NDNtube, NDNlive) através das respostas temporais de side-channel. O side-channel timing attack pode ser mitigado manipulando o tempo das respostas dos routers. As contramedidas propostas por outros pesquisadores, tais como o atraso adicional, o cache aleatório /probabilístico, as assinaturas de grupo e não fazer cache, podem ser efetivamente usadas para mitigar um ataque. No entanto, a distribuição de conteúdos pode ser afetada por contramedidas pré-configuradas que podem ir contra o propósito original do paradigma NDN. Neste trabalho, a abordagem de detecção e defesa (DaD) é proposta para mitigar o ataque de forma eficiente e eficaz. Com o uso do DaD, um ataque pode ser detectado por um mecanismo de detecção multi-nível, a fim de aplicar as contramedidas contra as interfaces dos adversários. Além disso, as detecções podem ser usadas para determinar a gravidade do ataque. A fim de detectar o comportamento de um adversário, um timing attack de força-bruta foi implementado e simulado com as seguintes aplicações e plataformas (testbeds): i. uma aplicação segura que implementa o VoNDN e identifica o certificado em cache numa plataforma NDN mundial; e ii. uma aplicação de streaming do tipo NDNtube para identificar a popularidade de vídeos na plataforma NDN da empresa AT&T. Os resultados da simulação mostraram que a detecção multi-nível oferecida pelo DaD atenuou o ataque cerca de 39,1% em best-route e 36,5% em comunicações multicast. Para avaliar o efeito nos pedidos legítimos, comparou-se o DaD com uma contramedida estática, tendo-se verificado que o DaD foi capaz de preservar todos os pedidos legítimos

    Covert Ephemeral Communication in Named Data Networking

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    In the last decade, there has been a growing realization that the current Internet Protocol is reaching the limits of its senescence. This has prompted several research efforts that aim to design potential next-generation Internet architectures. Named Data Networking (NDN), an instantiation of the content-centric approach to networking, is one such effort. In contrast with IP, NDN routers maintain a significant amount of user-driven state. In this paper we investigate how to use this state for covert ephemeral communication (CEC). CEC allows two or more parties to covertly exchange ephemeral messages, i.e., messages that become unavailable after a certain amount of time. Our techniques rely only on network-layer, rather than application-layer, services. This makes our protocols robust, and communication difficult to uncover. We show that users can build high-bandwidth CECs exploiting features unique to NDN: in-network caches, routers' forwarding state and name matching rules. We assess feasibility and performance of proposed cover channels using a local setup and the official NDN testbed
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