Polar proxies collaborating to achieve anonymous web browsing /
Abstract (Summary)
User tracking and profiling is a growing threat to online privacy. Whilst Internet
users can choose to withhold their personal information, their Internet
usage can still be traced back to a unique IP address.
This study considers anonymity as a strong and useful form of privacy
protection. More specifically, we examine how current anonymity solutions
suffer from a number of deficiencies: they are not commonly used, are vulnerable
to a host of attacks or are impractical or too cumbersome for daily
use. Most anonymity solutions are centralised or partially centralised and
require trust in the operators. It is additionally noted how current solutions
fail to promote anonymity for common Web activities such as performing
online search queries and general day-to-day Web browsing.
A primary objective of this research is to develop an anonymising Web
browsing protocol which aims to be (1) fully distributed, (2) offer adequate
levels of anonymity and (3) enable users to browse the Internet anonymously
without overly complex mixing techniques.
Our research has led to an anonymising protocol called Polar. Polar
is a peer-to-peer network which relays Web requests amongst peers before
forwarding it to a Web server, thus protecting the requester’s identity.
This dissertation presents the Polar model. Design choices and enhancements
to the model are discussed. The author’s implementation of Polar is
also presented demonstrating that an implementation of Polar is feasible.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:University of Pretoria/Universiteit van Pretoria
School Location:South Africa
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:computer security online searching
ISBN:
Date of Publication: