Visible to the public Exploiting Data-Usage Statistics for Website Fingerprinting Attacks on Android

TitleExploiting Data-Usage Statistics for Website Fingerprinting Attacks on Android
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsSpreitzer, Raphael, Griesmayr, Simone, Korak, Thomas, Mangard, Stefan
Conference NameProceedings of the 9th ACM Conference on Security & Privacy in Wireless and Mobile Networks
PublisherACM
Conference LocationNew York, NY, USA
ISBN Number978-1-4503-4270-4
Keywordsanonymity, anonymity in wireless networks, composability, data-usage statistics, Human Behavior, Metrics, mobile malware, mobile security, pubcrawl, Resiliency, Side-channel attack, website fingerprinting
Abstract

The browsing behavior of a user allows to infer personal details, such as health status, political interests, sexual orientation, etc. In order to protect this sensitive information and to cope with possible privacy threats, defense mechanisms like SSH tunnels and anonymity networks (e.g., Tor) have been established. A known shortcoming of these defenses is that website fingerprinting attacks allow to infer a user's browsing behavior based on traffic analysis techniques. However, website fingerprinting typically assumes access to the client's network or to a router near the client, which restricts the applicability of these attacks. In this work, we show that this rather strong assumption is not required for website fingerprinting attacks. Our client-side attack overcomes several limitations and assumptions of network-based fingerprinting attacks, e.g., network conditions and traffic noise, disabled browser caches, expensive training phases, etc. Thereby, we eliminate assumptions used for academic purposes and present a practical attack that can be implemented easily and deployed on a large scale. Eventually, we show that an unprivileged application can infer the browsing behavior by exploiting the unprotected access to the Android data-usage statistics. More specifically, we are able to infer 97% of 2,500 page visits out of a set of 500 monitored pages correctly. Even if the traffic is routed through Tor by using the Orbot proxy in combination with the Orweb browser, we can infer 95% of 500 page visits out of a set of 100 monitored pages correctly. Thus, the READ\_HISTORY\_BOOKMARKS permission, which is supposed to protect the browsing behavior, does not provide protection.

URLhttp://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2939918.2939922
DOI10.1145/2939918.2939922
Citation Keyspreitzer_exploiting_2016