On Wed, Oct 11, 2017 at 12:51 PM, Dino Farinacci <farinacci@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 11, 2017 at 12:39 PM, Dino Farinacci <farinacci@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Let me ask for your opinion Christian (or anyone else for that matter). If a device is assigned a private/public key-pair and the identifier for the device is a hash of the public-key, is the identifier private?
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> I can't answer this in isolation. Does the identifier show up on the wire? If so, then totally.
When the payload is encrypted, it does not.
Are the handshakes that establish the cryptographic keys used to encrypt the payload themselves encrypted? If it's IKE, the answer is probably yes, but if not, I don't know.
So let me ask you these follow-up questions:
(1) If a host sources a packet with its identifier in one VM and an encapsulator in another VM (in the same physical system) encapsulates the packet but encrypts the payload before encapsulation, has the identifier remain private?
(2) If in (1), the packet is decapsulated by an intermmediate point, and then reencapsulated but the packet is encrypted with a new session key (from a new ECDH exchange) to the destination, has the identifier remained private?
Generally, I don't tend to think of things as being "private" or "non-private". Rather we talk about who has a given capability or piece of information. I think it's clear that in these cases the identifier was available to the machine doing the deencapsulation/reencapsulation. Obviously, that's worse for privacy than having it not have that information. How much worse depends on a lot of factors.
In this particular, work, however, it seems like the privacy concerns are about:
1. Whether the ID mapping systems reveal who is talking to who.
2. Whether this creates persistent identifiers that would otherwise be destroyed when people changed their location
Maybe Christian and Stephen would like to say more about their concerns
-Ekr
Dino
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> -Ekr
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> Is the identifier trackable even when its network location is not generally known, not advertised publicly, and possibly changing frequently?
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> Dino
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> > On Oct 11, 2017, at 12:34 PM, Christian Huitema <huitema@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > On 10/11/2017 10:32 AM, Padma Pillay-Esnault wrote:
> >> but you do not need a reference to a permanent identity for that -- systems similar to CGA would work just fine.
> >>
> >>
> >> The identity of the device is just adding a lever of identifier which effectively allows authentication to modify the identifiers used by that device but also what the users of these identifiers can look up. If we had used "user of identifier" it would have been misconstrued for humans. So damn if you do and damn if you don't ...
> >>
> >> We are open for discussions anytime.
> >>
> >
> > Some thing you should be hearing is that "long term identity of device" has almost the same privacy properties as "long term identity of the device's owner". You may think that identifying a random piece of hardware is no big deal, but it turns out that the network activity and network locations of that piece of hardware can be associated to those of its human owner. So you need the same kind of protection for these device identifiers as for human identifiers.
> > --
> > Christian Huitema
> >
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