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Quantifying Nations Exposure to Traffic Observation and Selective Tampering

Authors :
Gamero-Garrido, Alexander
Carisimo, Esteban
Hao, Shuai
Huffaker, Bradley
Snoeren, Alex C.
Dainotti, Alberto
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Almost all popular Internet services are hosted in a select set of countries, forcing other nations to rely on international connectivity to access them. We infer instances where traffic towards a large portion of a country is serviced by a small number of Autonomous Systems, and, therefore, may be exposed to observation or selective tampering. We introduce the Country-level Transit Influence (CTI) metric to quantify the significance of a given AS on the international transit service of a particular country. By studying the CTI values for the top ASes in each country, we find that 32 nations have transit ecosystems that render them particularly exposed, with traffic destined to over 40% of their IP addresses privy to a single AS. In the nations where we are able to validate our findings with in-country operators, we obtain 83% accuracy on average. In the countries we examine, CTI reveals two classes of networks that play a particularly prominent role: submarine cable operators and state-owned ASes.<br />Comment: Passive and Active Measurement Conference (PAM) 2022

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2110.05772
Document Type :
Working Paper