From 1c74eb5cea30b4ecfff957bc38fde032b3f5784f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Roger Dingledine Date: Fri, 19 May 2017 00:11:27 -0400 Subject: minor touch-ups on the glossary the only exciting one is that we don't use guards to defend against "enumeration attacks" -- i'm not quite sure what an enumeration attack is, but it sounds like something where the guard is able to make a list of users, and where having that list is bad news in itself. that's not quite what guards are for. --- glossary.txt | 14 +++++++------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) (limited to 'glossary.txt') diff --git a/glossary.txt b/glossary.txt index e1a0f0a..dda94e0 100644 --- a/glossary.txt +++ b/glossary.txt @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ citing them authoritatively. ;) Guard relay: A relay that a client uses as its entry for a longer period of time. Guard relays are rotated more slowly to prevent - enumeration attacks. + attacks that can come from being exposed to too many guards. Bridge: A relay intentionally not listed in the public Tor consensus, with the purpose of circumventing entities (such as @@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ citing them authoritatively. ;) Any relay will act as a directory cache, if its bandwidth is high enough. Rendezvous point: A relay connecting a client to a hidden service. - Each party will builds a three-hop circuit, meeting at the + Each party builds a three-hop circuit, meeting at the rendezvous point. 2.2 Client, aka OP (onion proxy) @@ -66,9 +66,9 @@ citing them authoritatively. ;) Directory Authority: Nine total in the Tor network, operated by trusted individuals. Directory authorities define and serve the consensus document, defining the "state of the network." This document - contains a "router status" section for every relays currently + contains a "router status" section for every relay currently in the network. Directory authorities also serve router descriptors, - extra info documents, microdescriptors, and the microdescriptor consensus, + extra info documents, microdescriptors, and the microdescriptor consensus. Bridge Authority: One total. Similar in responsibility to directory authorities, but for bridges. @@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ citing them authoritatively. ;) An established path through the network, where cryptographic keys are negotiated using the ntor protocol or TAP (Tor Authentication - Protocol (deprecated) with each hop. Circuits can differ in length + Protocol (deprecated)) with each hop. Circuits can differ in length depending on their purpose. See also Leaky Pipe Topology. Origin Circuit - @@ -113,8 +113,8 @@ citing them authoritatively. ;) 2.8 Descriptor: Each descriptor represents information about one relay in the Tor network. The descriptor includes the relay's IP - address, public key fingerprint, along with other data. Relays send - descriptors to directory authorities, who will vote and publish a + address, public keys, and other data. Relays send + descriptors to directory authorities, who vote and publish a summary of them in the network consensus. 3.0 Tor network protocols -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf