On Fri, 15 Apr 2011 04:12:53 -0700 Mike Perry mikeperry@fscked.org wrote:
Thus spake Scott Bennett (bennett@cs.niu.edu):
On Sat, 02 Apr 2011 Jacob Appelbaum jacob@appelbaum.net > wrote:
On Thu, 10 Mar 2011 10:27:50 -0800 Chris Palmer chris@eff.org wrote:
The Observatory work was not done through Tor.
=20 Good.
I think we need a scan of the SSLiverse through Tor.
Use !=3D abuse. If I run sendmail with it configured to accept mail from outside, th=
at
does not mean I agree to receive massmail, malware, or other bad stuff via TCP port 25. Because various idiots with access to the Internet insist u=
pon
attempting to abuse my ability to receive mail does not militate against =
my
defending my system from such malicious activity in any way I see fit.
You are right. It does not. You are entitled and in fact expected to defend your system from scans and abuse.
Censor yourself, not others.
Laying aside for the moment the definitional problem with your demand that I am neither a state nor an employee of one, I think you have gotten me mixed up with someone else. I have never advocated censorship. You perhaps have forgotten the many instances in which I have requested a BadExit flag be assigned to exit nodes that altered the data returned to tor streams from the destinations or that reliably "failed" to connect to certain destinations when other exit nodes did connect to them. I have, OTOH, stated approximately my policy regarding inappropriate attempts to probe or otherwise access my computer. If you see some connection between my denial of access to my ORPort and DirPort to systems I deem to be miscreants based upon their own past behavior and the administration of an exit node, then please enlighten me because my understanding hitherto of the design of tor was to render untraceable any relationship between the two, which would seem to me to require that entry node access restrictions have no relationship to exit restrictions.
=20
Further, an activity that can be used by one party to cause terminat=
ion
of another, innocent party's Internet connection is an intolerable assault upon the latter party's paid access to the Internet for all purposes, not just to offer additional capacity to the tor network, and upon a private agreement between the latter party and his/her ISP. Defense against such offenses is completely appropriate and in order.
It is not an arbitrary party whose Internet connection risks termination. It is a party that signed up to protect Internet freedom and resist censorship. People who want to bring censorship to Tor are not welcome on the network. The reason is simply because censorship does not work.
True enough, though irrelevant to the discussion of entry node access.
The activity in question also is not easily distinguishable from that
of a lot of actual malware that scans for open ports to find a way in.
This justifies Internet censorship? Or censorship at Tor Exits?
It seems that I am not the only one who has misplaced some details here. I cannot remember ever having advocated filtering of exit traffic in any way other than by published exit policy. In fact, I have even once asked for a BadExit flag for a node that returned bad data that it itself may have received from some intermediating proxy on grounds that the data were still not what should have been returned. (That was the time that grarpamp objected on grounds that it might not have been the exit node's fault, even though the data were still bad.) I note here again, non-state entities might filter, but by definition, are not censors because they only exert control over their own property, as opposed to state entities that do violate the property rights of others by forcibly exerting control over the private property of others in order to restrict or adulterate the transmission of information.
Or are we just trying to ethically define "abuse" and "anything that looks like malware" is the best we've come up with so far? That's a pretty poor standard.
I define it as TCP SYN or UDP packets sent to ports on my system on which no program is listening, which is the same as saying that they are attempts of unauthorized access.
Google seems to have this data from crawling the web and simply caching it as a matter of crawling everything - they get the data from lots of sources such as other urls, toolbars, etc. Google recently published the Google Certificate Catalog: http://googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.com/2011/04/improving-ssl-certifica=
te-security.html
So is Google's method the only ethical way to collect this certificate data? Or is there no method for collecting this data without users manually submitting each certificate they encounter by hand?
AFAIK, Google does not use the tor network for its web (or other)
crawling activities. For Google's purposes, the tor network would be unusably slow. AFAIK, Google does not use any method that uses someone else's computer(s) to make its connections to a destination.=20
What does using the Tor network have to do with the ethics of crawling the web/Internet? What makes it not OK to crawl the Internet anonymously, but makes it acceptable to seek that same information so long as you are not anonymous? Or are we being Kantian here, and saying that if everyone crawled the Internet, we'd be doomed. So therefore, only Google can crawl the Internet? That doesn't work either.
The problem, as I hoped I had made clear already, is that it incites damage to the tor network, specifically to both the population of tor exit nodes and their operators' Internet access. Google, AFAIK, does not use tor and therefore does not place tor exit nodes at risk.
Again, people sign up to be Tor relays to take a stand against Internet censorship and surveillance. It is thus expected that they allow all traffic to pass unmolested and unmonitored, or work to implement a way to do their programmatic ExitPolicy filtering in a way that does not impede client activity.
Exits are not so scarce that we need to flex our morals on this point.
I am not going to get into a discussion of morals because morals vary from one person to another based upon anything from religion to culture to personal whim. I limit my discussion to points of ethics, which are invariant and can therefore be addressed with consistency.
An EFF employee, OTOH, has confessed to doing so on this list. The latter, then, is burning CPU time, as well as network connection throughput capacity, on not just one system, but on routelen + 1 systems for each scanned system times the number of ports scanned on that system.
Nobody confessed to doing anything over Tor. Chris and Jake simply defended the idea of crawling the net over Tor. At no point did anybody state that the scan did happen over Tor. In fact, several people said the opposite.
You are correct in this matter. I misremembered that detail, and I apologize for my misstatement. Nevertheless, Chris, IIRC, did say that he supported such abuse of tor exits, even though he had not (yet) done so himself.
Perhaps if your mail client supported threading this would be more apparent to you? Actually, it's right there in the very first text you
No, it has nothing to do with mail software, as you observe in your next sentence.
quoted, though. So perhaps something else is amiss. Is the pager in UNIX 'mail' still the original 'more' or something? Or are you still
less(1).
using 'ed' to type your mails? :)
The problem was (and still is, though less so already) the delay in catching up to current mail due to an immense backlog in my in box. Ever since I unsubscribed from tor-talk several weeks ago, I have slowly been gaining ground on the extent of the running backlog, so the situation can be expected to improve over time. My apologies for my confusion.
Another point, though irrelevant due to the ethical considerations that we've been discussing so far, is that there is no particular reason to use tor rather than some other proxy to look at the Internet from different locations. Anonymity is not necessary to achieve that end.
It is very useful to be able to scan the Internet from multiple, stable vantage points with anonymity.
That seems likely true. However, it doesn't justify doing damage to third parties, who have committed no offense other than to offer a service to a community of users who desire to access the Internet anonymously, nor to that community of users by reducing the size of the pools of exit nodes and of any other circuit positions in which those same nodes may serve.
So long as the resources of any one site are not unreasonably consumed, and so long as the scanner is not substantially occupying Tor exit bandwidth, I really don't see what is so ethically complicated about this.=20
As noted before, the ethical problem is that exit nodes are put at much greater risk of elimination. I realize full well that there are plenty of other tor users who act in similarly damaging ways for actually nefarious ends, but the point remains that the means are wrong, regardless of the ends.
By occupying this topic with our attention, we are allowing ISPs who seek to impose restrictions on Tor traffic in one form or another to have their way and dictate what is acceptable on our network. Such
I would be interested to know what evidence you have to support that claim. From what I've seen thus far, ISPs, especially gigantic ones like Comcast, have not the slightest interest in which programs one runs, much less the often esoteric discussions on mailing lists related to those programs. Instead, they care about dividing their services into two classes: one class that is relatively cheap but is definitely *not* a full-service for Internet access and another class that costs at least twice as much and usually provides something approximating full Internet access. In the U.S., the partial service has sometimes been falsely, and therefore illegally, advertised as "full Internet service" or "unlimited Internet access/service".
ISPs do not deserve any Tor-related revenue.
Agreed. However, in many locations there is no or greatly restricted competition, often due to governmental intervention, so the individual subscriber's options may be limited to either working with such degenerate corporations or not being connected to the Internet at all.
It is that simple. We can worry about compromising our principles for precious few kilobits when all else has failed.
If you are so willing to compromise on principles, then why do you devote your professional life's work to the tor project? Do you secretly aim to undermine the goals of the project in some way? After all, you recently opined that exit nodes with throughput capacities less than 100 kB/s were basically a nuisance and/or not worth bothering with, just caused load distribution problems, and so forth, an opinion discouraging volunteers from running such exits. If that discouragement were to succeed in reducing the size of the exit pool, that would seem to reduce the anonymity of tor users correspondingly, something that would also seem in order for someone trying to sabotage a project for which he worked. I trust that wasn't your real intention, but it surely could have been interpreted that way by someone outside your inner circle. I was astonished when I first read it.
Scott Bennett, Comm. ASMELG, CFIAG ********************************************************************** * Internet: bennett at cs.niu.edu * *--------------------------------------------------------------------* * "A well regulated and disciplined militia, is at all times a good * * objection to the introduction of that bane of all free governments * * -- a standing army." * * -- Gov. John Hancock, New York Journal, 28 January 1790 * **********************************************************************
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