2021-gosain-too
findings extracted from this paper
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Anycast CDN architecture dominates popular web content delivery: in the US, 59% of Alexa top-1k websites use anycast CDNs vs. 19% DNS-based; in Saudi Arabia, 57% use anycast CDNs. IP geolocation databases such as Maxmind are severely inaccurate for anycast infrastructure — reporting only <15% of Saudi Alexa websites as in-country vs. 90% measured by RTT-based multilateration — causing prior research to incorrectly attribute "nation-state hegemony" over developing-country Internet traffic.
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CacheBrowser and CDNReaper require clients to contact foreign CDN front-end IPs directly, but this only works for DNS-based CDNs; anycast CDNs use the same IP globally, so bypassing local DNS still routes the client to a local front-end. Only approximately 11% of Alexa top-1k websites use DNS-based CDNs across the five tested countries, and for potentially blocked sites (Citizen Lab lists), CacheBrowser can access only ~18% of 2,769 blocked URLs in Brazil.
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CDN infrastructure causes 61%–92% of country-specific Alexa top-1k websites to be hosted within the client's own country across India, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, and the US, as measured by the authors' R-CBG multilateration technique achieving >89% accuracy. This traffic localization means web requests to popular sites rarely cross national borders, undermining the foundational assumption of decoy routing, domain fronting, CacheBrowser, and CovertCast.
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Conjure's initial registration step requires the client to connect to an overt website hosted outside the censor's jurisdiction before deriving the unused IP address for actual decoy routing, but CDN traffic localization means this bootstrap connection frequently terminates at a local front-end and never crosses the border. The paper finds that for India's Alexa top-100 sites, only 23 websites had any parallel (leaf) HTTP connections terminating outside the country, with a median of just 3 such external leaf connections per site.
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Domain fronting is undermined when CDN front-ends are located within the censor's jurisdiction because the censor can coerce the CDN provider to disable domain fronting on those front-ends. Russia coerced Google, Amazon, and Microsoft to halt Telegram's use of domain fronting; the paper's measurements confirm that CDN front-ends for popular services (YouTube, Facebook, Instagram) are hosted within all five tested countries.