Loading…
Friday, February 19 • 10:00am - 10:15am
When DNS Goes Dark: Understanding Privacy and Shaping Policy of an Evolving Protocol

Sign up or log in to save this to your schedule, view media, leave feedback and see who's attending!

Link to Paper​​​
Abstract:
The Domain Name Service (DNS) is the most widely deployed Internet service. Stark in its simplicity, it maps host names to routable IP addresses. Replacing a collection of names mapped to IP addresses stored in a disk file, modern DNS is now a scalable, hierarchical, decentralized, and world-wide naming system for Internet resources. Because of its ubiquity and importance, as well as the fact that queries are performed in cleartext, DNS remains an attractive target for malicious and benign actors. But the rising interest in privacy driven by pervasive monitoring and the commodification of personal data has triggered the need for encryption in key Internet protocols, including DNS. DNS is evolving to increasingly support confidentiality and privacy; DNS over TLS (DoT) and DNS over HTTPS (DoH) have been standardized with encryption between the user and DNS server. While these protocols appear to preserve user privacy, unintended consequences within the DNS ecosystem still exist. We explore the effects of encrypted DNS on the privacy of individuals, and ascertain whether these protocols and their operational reality have achieved the goal of increased user privacy. Further, we examine privacy policies of twelve public DNS providers in the context of select articles from the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) legislation. Finally, we examine the important role standards bodies, regulatory agencies, and non-government organizations (NGO) can play to ensure continued user privacy even as the DNS protocol continues to evolve. We propose approaches that address the unique privacy attributes of DNS: mostly invisible to the user, yet offering operators of DNS resolver services uniquely-detailed visibility into user behavior.

Moderators
avatar for Marjory Blumenthal

Marjory Blumenthal

MSBlumenthal, LLC
TPRC veteran w/Internet and cybersecurity interests, expanded to automated vehicles, safety, and other issues relating to uses of AI, mobile, IOT...

Authors
VG

Vijay Gurbani

Illinois Institute of Technology
CH

Cynthia Hood

Illinois Institute of Technology
avatar for Anita Nikolich

Anita Nikolich

UIUC
Network and Security researcher & Director of Research and Innovation at UIUC.Fellow and Lecturer, UChicago Harris School Cyber Policy Initiative.AAAS Leshner Leadership Fellow in AI, 2020-21.Co-lead the DEFCON AI Village. https://aivillage.org/Cryptocurrency security and analytics... Read More →
HS

Henning Schulzrinne

Columbia University


Friday February 19, 2021 10:00am - 10:15am EST
Room #3