Privacy-Preserving Interdomain Routing at Internet Scale

  • Asharov G
  • Demmler D
  • Schapira M
  • et al.
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Abstract

The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) computes routes between the organizational networks that make up today’s Internet. Unfortunately, BGP suffers from deficiencies, including slow convergence, security problems, a lack of innovation, and the leakage of sensitive information about domains’ routing preferences. To overcome some of these problems, we revisit the idea of centralizing and using secure multi-party computation (MPC) for interdomain routing which was proposed by Gupta et al. (ACM HotNets’12). We implement two algorithms for interdomain routing with state-of-the-art MPC protocols. On an empirically derived dataset that approximates the topology of today’s Internet (55 809 nodes), our protocols take as little as 6 s of topology-independent precomputation and only 3 s of online time. We show, moreover, that when our MPC approach is applied at country/region-level scale, runtimes can be as low as 0.17 s online time and 0.20 s pre-computation time. Our results motivate the MPC approach for interdomain routing and furthermore demonstrate that current MPC techniques are capable of efficiently tackling real-world problems at a large scale.

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APA

Asharov, G., Demmler, D., Schapira, M., Schneider, T., Segev, G., Shenker, S., & Zohner, M. (2017). Privacy-Preserving Interdomain Routing at Internet Scale. Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies, 2017(3), 147–167. https://doi.org/10.1515/popets-2017-0033

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