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QUIC website-fingerprinting defenses

Artifact release for the paper "Evaluating practical QUIC website fingerprinting defenses for the masses" (PETS 2023).

Description

The goal of the artifact is to show website-fingerprinting defenses on QUIC traffic. The artifact performs two types of defenses using padding (apply QUIC PADDING frames to packets): application-agnostic and application-aware. The former is a purely network-layer defense that does not take application-layer data (such as total size of websites) into account. The latter considers application-layer data when performing the defense. In application-agnostic defenses, the artifact also consists of scenarios where a website-fingerprinting adversary is limited and does not have the entire network trace to perform an attack. We consider two cases of a limited adversary -- one where they have limited visibility (so partial network traces) and one where they have limited processing capability (so they perform the attack on sampled Netflows instead of full traffic).

The artifact consists of the following:

  1. A capture setup to capture QUIC traffic given a set of websites.
  2. A setup to extract features and run a website-fingerprinting attack using random forests. The attack can be run either with a powerful adversary or a limited adversary.
  3. A setup for website-fingerprinting defenses in an application-agnostic scenario.
  4. A setup for webssite-fingerprinting defenses in an application-aware scenario.

Code Organization

The code is organized in the following folders:

capture provides all the scripts necessary to perform different kinds of data capture used in the paper (network traffic, HAR files, traceroutes).

process-capture provides the scripts necessary to process the captures into formats used for classification. It also contains scripts to convert network captures into netflows.

app-agnostic-attacks contains scripts for the various application-agnostic WF attacks and defenses (Section 4 of the paper).

app-aware-attacks contains scripts for the various application-aware WF attacks and defenses (Section 5 of the paper).

lib contains some helper files used by the other scripts.

Each folder contains READMEs that describe how to run the code.

Setup

We provide a Docker setup with all the required dependencies. First, install Docker. After cloning the repo, build the image using the following command:

$ cd quic-wf-defenses
$ docker build -t quic-wf-defenses .

We also recommend you to mount a volume on the container if you want to store some data. For the rest of the instructions, we will assume you bound a directory on your host to a /data directory at the root of the file system of the docker container.

Start the container and execute a shell as follows:

$ mkdir saved-data
$ docker run --rm --detach --interactive --privileged --mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)"/saved-data,target=/data --name quic-wf-container quic-wf-defenses
$ docker exec -it quic-wf-container /bin/bash

After running the experiment, you can stop the container with a regulardocker command:

$ docker container stop quic-wf-container

Datasets

We provide datasets on SWITCHDrive which can be used to as tests to run the attacks (instead of performing captures from scratch). If you want to perform your own captures, please follow the instructions in code/capture/.

The README has an overview of the datasets.

Paper

Evaluating practical QUIC website fingerprinting defenses for the masses Sandra Siby, Ludovic Barman, Christopher A. Wood, Marwan Fayed, Nick Sullivan, Carmela Troncoso PETS 2023

Abstract -- Website fingerprinting (WF) is a well-known threat to users’ web privacy. New Internet standards, such as QUIC, include padding to support defenses against WF. Previous work on QUIC WF only analyzes the effectiveness of defenses when users are behind a VPN. Yet, this is not how most users browse the Internet. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive evaluation of QUIC-padding-based defenses against WF when users directly browse the web, i.e., without VPNs, HTTPS proxies, or other tunneling protocols. We confirm previous claims that application-agnostic transport-layer padding cannot provide effective protection against powerful adversaries capable of observing all traffic traces. We further demonstrate that such padding is ineffective even against adversaries with constraints on traffic visibility and processing power. At the pplication layer, we show that defenses need to be deployed by both first and third parties, and that they can only thwart traffic analysis in limited situations. We identify challenges to deploy effective WF defenses and provide recommendations to address them.

[Link to full paper, coming soon!]

Citation

If you use the code/data in your research, please cite our work as follows:

@inproceedings{Siby23QUICWF,
  title     = {Evaluating practical QUIC website fingerprinting defenses for the masses},
  author    = {Sandra Siby, Ludovic Barman, Christopher A. Wood, Marwan Fayed, Nick Sullivan, Carmela Troncoso},
  booktitle = {PETS},
  year      = {2023}
}