2020-nasr-massbrowser
findings extracted from this paper
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Survey data indicates 31% of Chinese Internet users use VPN services compared to Tor's approximately 2 million daily users globally, and centralized non-anonymous systems like Lantern and Psiphon dominate adoption over anonymity-focused tools. The paper argues this demonstrates that the majority of censored users prioritize blocking resistance over anonymity, supporting a separation-of-properties design principle.
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The majority of censored websites are blocked in only one or two countries, with political and news content showing the strongest geographic specificity. Figure 3 shows that of domains blocked in China, Iran, and Turkey, only 29 are blocked in both China and Turkey, while 27,852 are China-only and 1,564 are Iran-only, demonstrating that cross-region client-to-client proxying is broadly applicable.
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MassBrowser proxies operate on NATed IP addresses shared with other users and services, meaning blocking them imposes collateral damage on unrelated parties. The proxy IP pool scales linearly with user count via client-to-client proxying, and IPs rotate as volunteers move between networks, making enumeration-and-block strategies progressively more costly for censors.
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In a traffic sample from a major non-anonymous circumvention tool (3.56 TB total, Feb 21, 2008), 48% of all proxied traffic belonged to websites that were not censored in Iran. Integrating CacheBrowsing to fetch CDN-hosted censored content directly further saves 41% of Buddy bandwidth for Alexa top-1000 websites.
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MassBrowser estimates operational cost at $0.0001 per active client per month at large scale; the domain-fronted Operator alone costs ~$0.001 per active client per month because signaling traffic volume is small. Domain fronting used for bulk data proxying is characterized as prohibitively expensive and not viable at scale.