[Infowarrior] - Collage: Defeating Censorship with User-Generated Content

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Mon Jul 12 17:31:13 CDT 2010


Collage: Defeating Censorship with User-Generated Content

http://gtnoise.net/projects/7-anti-censorship/7-collage-defeating-censorship-with-user-generated-content
 
Oppressive regimes and even democratic governments restrict Internet access. Existing anti-censorship systems often require users to connect through proxies, but these systems are relatively easy for a censor to discover and block. This project offers a possible next step in the censorship arms race: rather than relying on a single system or set of proxies to circumvent censorship firewalls, we explore whether the vast deployment of sites that host user-generated content can breach these firewalls. We have developed Collage, which allows users to exchange messages through hidden channels in sites that host user-generated content. Collage has two components: a message vector layer for embedding content in cover traffic; and a rendezvous mechanism to allow parties to publish and retrieve messages in the cover traffic. Collage uses user-generated content (e.g., photo-sharing sites) as “drop sites” for hidden messages.  To send a message, a user embeds it into cover traffic and posts the content on some site, where receivers retrieve this content using a sequence of tasks. Collage makes it difficult for a censor to monitor or block these messages by exploiting the sheer number of sites where users can exchange messages and the variety of ways that a message can be hidden. Our evaluation of Collage shows that the performance overhead is acceptable for sending small messages (e.g., Web articles, email).

Applications use Collage to send and receive messages, by hiding these messages inside user-generated cover content (e.g., images, tweets, etc.) and publishing them on user-generated content hosts like Flickr or Twitter. At the receiver, Collage fetches the cover content from content hosts and decodes the message. By hiding data inside user-generated content as they traverse the network, Collage escapes detection by censors.

Software Release

We will be releasing Collage within the next few weeks.

Publications

	• Chipping Away at Censorship with User-Generated Content
S. Burnett, N. Feamster, and S. Vempala
USENIX Security Symposium. August 2010



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