DocumentCode :
21328
Title :
A Location-Privacy Threat Stemming from the Use of Shared Public IP Addresses
Author :
Vratonjic, Nevena ; Huguenin, Kevin ; Bindschaedler, Vincent ; Hubaux, Jean-Pierre
Author_Institution :
Kudelski Security, Cheseaux-sur-Lausanne, Switzerland
Volume :
13
Issue :
11
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Nov. 2014
Firstpage :
2445
Lastpage :
2457
Abstract :
This paper presents a concrete and widespread example of situation where a user´s location privacy is unintentionally compromised by others, specifically the location-privacy threat that exists at access points (public hotspots, FON, home routers, etc.) that have a single public IP and make use of network address translation (NAT). As users connected to the same hotspot share a unique public IP address, a single user´s making a location-based request is enough to enable a service provider to map the IP address of the hotspot to its geographic coordinates, thus compromising the location privacy of all the other connected users. When successful, the service provider can locate users within a few hundreds of meters, thus improving over existing IP-location databases. Even in the case where IPs change periodically (e.g., by using DHCP), the service provider is still able to update a previous (IP, Location) mapping by inferring IP changes from authenticated communications (e.g., cookies). The contribution of this paper is three-fold: (i) We identify a novel location-privacy threat caused by shared public IPs in combination with NAT. (ii) We formalize and analyze the threat theoretically. In particular we derive and provide expressions of the probability that the service provider will learn the mapping and of the expected proportion of victims. (iii) We experimentally assess the state in practice by using real traces (collected from deployed hotspots over a period of 23 days) of users who accessed Google services. We also discuss how existing countermeasures can thwart the threat.
Keywords :
IP networks; computer network security; data privacy; Google services; IP-location databases; NAT; access points; connected users; geographic coordinates; location-based request; location-privacy threat; network address translation; service provider; shared public IP addresses; single public IP; Accuracy; Databases; Google; IP networks; Internet; Mobile computing; Servers; IP-geolocation; Location privacy; network address translation (NAT);
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Mobile Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1536-1233
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TMC.2014.2309953
Filename :
6757043
Link To Document :
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