2014-anonymous-towards
findings extracted from this paper
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The GFW does not distinguish DNS query traffic directionality, injecting forged replies for both inbound and outbound queries on monitored links. This causes collateral censorship of DNS resolvers outside China when they contact authoritative nameservers located in or whose paths transit China, even for non-Chinese clients.
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Testing approximately 130 million domain names uncovered 35,332 censored domains from which 14,495 keywords were extracted across 7 distinct matching patterns. The blocklist grew by approximately 10% over eight months (August 2013–April 2014), and more than two-thirds of censored domains had expired registrations, suggesting the GFW rarely removes entries.
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The GFW deploys DNS injection nodes only at China's border, within 2–3 hops of international transit points, across 16 border ASes. Internal probing found only 0.04% of 42,849 domestic routing paths exhibited DNS pollution, versus ~80% of externally-facing /24 subnets.
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Probing ~150,000 open DNS resolvers inside China over two weeks found that more than 99.85% provided polluted answers for blocked domains. The small fraction of clean resolvers achieved this by forwarding queries to Google Public DNS or OpenDNS via uncensored tunnels, or by locally dropping responses containing known GFW 'Bad IP' addresses (174 identified IPs).
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A single GFW node employs approximately 360 distinct processes, load-balanced by source and destination IP address, which collectively inject censored DNS responses at an average rate of ~2,800 packets per second, ranging from 1,100 to 4,000 pps over a day.