Litcius/Paper detail

DISCO: Sidestepping RPKI's Deployment Barriers

Tomáš Hlaváček, Ítalo Cunha, Yossi Gilad, Amir Herzberg, Ethan Katz-Bassett, Michael Schapira, Haya Shulman

202029 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BGP is a gaping security hole in today's Internet, as evidenced by numerous Internet outages and blackouts, repeated traffic hijacking, and surveillance incidents. To protect against prefix hijacking, the Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI) has been standardized. Yet, despite Herculean efforts, ubiquitous deployment of the RPKI remains distant, due to RPKI's manual and error-prone certification process. We argue that deploying origin authentication at scale requires substituting the standard requirement of certifying legal ownership of IP address blocks with the goal of certifying de facto ownership. We show that settling for de facto ownership is sufficient for protecting against hazardous prefix hijacking and can be accomplished without requiring any changes to today's routing infrastructure. We present DISCO, a readily deployable system that automatically certifies de facto ownership and generates the appropriate BGPpath-filtering rules at routers. We evaluate DISCO's security and deployability via live experiments on the Internet using a prototype implementation of DISCO and through simulations on empirically-derived datasets. To facilitate the reproducibility of our results, we open source our prototype, simulator, and measurement analysis code

Topics & Concepts

Software deploymentComputer scienceBusinessSoftware engineeringNetwork Security and Intrusion DetectionCryptographic Implementations and SecurityNetwork Packet Processing and Optimization