How Great is the Great Firewall? Measuring China’s DNS Censorship
Simon Frey
Künstliche Intelligenz verst?ndlich machen, daran arbeiten wir mit beansandbytes | Site Reliability Engineer & Fractional CTO | Ex-Head of Infrastructure | Bücherwurm & Podcaster
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China is known for having the best internet censorship around the globe. This week's paper measured 411M DNS entries per day over a period of 9 months. The paper dives into how the blocking might work (no-one really knows) and how the rulesets often result in over blocking of unrelated domains.
Original Version on?www.weeklycspaper.com
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Abstract:
The DNS filtering apparatus of China’s Great Firewall (GFW) has evolved considerably over the past two decades. However, most prior studies of China’s DNS filtering were performed over short time periods, leading to unnoticed changes in the GFW’s behavior. In this study, we introduce GFWatch, a large-scale, longitudinal measurement platform capable of testing hundreds of millions of domains daily, enabling continuous monitoring of the GFW’s DNS filtering behavior. We present the results of running GFWatch over a nine-month period, during which we tested an average of 411M domains per day and detected a total of 311K domains censored by GFW’s DNS filter. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest number of domains tested and censored domains discovered in the literature. We further reverse engineer regular expressions used by the GFW and find 41K innocuous domains that match these filters, resulting in overblocking of their content. We also observe bogus IPv6 and globally routable IPv4 addresses injected by the GFW, including addresses owned by US companies, such as Facebook, Dropbox, and Twitter. Using data from GFWatch, we studied the impact of GFW blocking on the global DNS system. We found 77K censored domains with DNS resource records polluted in popular public DNS resolvers, such as Google and Cloudflare. Finally, we propose strategies to detect poisoned responses that can (1) sanitize poisoned DNS records from the cache of public DNS resolvers, and (2) assist in the development of circumvention tools to bypass the GFW’s DNS censorship
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