Abstract
We present the design and prototype implementation of ConScript, a framework for using JavaScript to encourage casual Web users to participate in an anonymous communication system. When a Web user visits a cooperative Web site, the site serves a JavaScript application that instructs the browser to create and submit "dummy" messages into the anonymity system. Users who want to send non-dummy messages through the anonymity system use a browser plug-in to replace these dummy messages with real messages. Creating such conscripted anonymity sets can increase the anonymity set size available to users of remailer, e-voting, and verifiable shuffle-style anonymity systems. We outline ConScript's architecture, we address a number of potential attacks against ConScript, and we discuss the ethical issues related to deploying such a system. Our implementation results demonstrate the practicality of ConScript: a workstation running our prototype ConScript JavaScript client generates a dummy message for a mix-net in 81 milliseconds and it generates a dummy message for a DoS-resistant DC-net in 156 milliseconds. © 2013 ACM.
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CITATION STYLE
Corrigan-Gibbs, H., & Ford, B. (2013). Conscript your friends into larger anonymity sets with JavaScript. In Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (pp. 243–248). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/2517840.2517866
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