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rfc:rfc4882

Network Working Group R. Koodli Request for Comments: 4882 Nokia Siemens Networks Category: Informational May 2007

   IP Address Location Privacy and Mobile IPv6: Problem Statement

Status of This Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
 not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
 memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).

Abstract

 In this document, we discuss location privacy as applicable to Mobile
 IPv6.  We document the concerns arising from revealing a Home Address
 to an onlooker and from disclosing a Care-of Address to a
 correspondent.

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................2
 2. Definitions .....................................................3
 3. Problem Definition ..............................................4
    3.1. Disclosing the Care-of Address to the Correspondent Node ...4
    3.2. Revealing the Home Address to Onlookers ....................4
    3.3. Problem Scope ..............................................4
 4. Problem Illustration ............................................5
 5. Conclusion ......................................................7
 6. Security Considerations .........................................7
 7. Acknowledgments .................................................8
 8. References ......................................................8
    8.1. Normative References .......................................8
    8.2. Informative References .....................................8
 Appendix A. Background ............................................10

Koodli Informational [Page 1] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

1. Introduction

 The problems of location privacy, and privacy when using IP for
 communication, have become important.  IP privacy is broadly
 concerned with protecting user communication from unwittingly
 revealing information that could be used to analyze and gather
 sensitive user data.  Examples include gathering data at certain
 vantage points, collecting information related to specific traffic,
 and monitoring (perhaps) certain populations of users for activity
 during specific times of the day, etc.  In this document, we refer to
 this as the "profiling" problem.
 Location privacy is concerned with the problem of revealing roaming,
 which we define here as the process of a Mobile Node (MN) moving from
 one network to another with or without ongoing sessions.  A constant
 identifier with global scope can reveal roaming.  Examples are a
 device identifier such as an IP address, and a user identifier such
 as a SIP [RFC3261] URI [RFC3986].  Often, a binding between these two
 identifiers is available, e.g., through DNS [RFC1035].  Traffic
 analysis of such IP and Upper Layer Protocol identifiers on a single
 network can indicate device and user roaming.  Roaming could also be
 inferred by means of profiling constant fields in IP communication
 across multiple network movements.  For example, an Interface
 Identifier (IID) [RFC2462] in the IPv6 address that remains unchanged
 across networks could suggest roaming.  The Security Parameter Index
 (SPI) in the IPsec [RFC4301] header is another field that may be
 subject to such profiling and inference.  Inferring roaming in this
 way typically requires traffic analysis across multiple networks, or
 colluding attackers, or both.  When location privacy is compromised,
 it could lead to more targeted profiling of user communication.
 As can be seen, the location privacy problem spans multiple protocol
 layers.  Nevertheless, we can examine problems encountered by nodes
 using a particular protocol layer.  Roaming is particularly important
 to Mobile IP, which defines a global identifier (Home Address) that
 can reveal device roaming, and in conjunction with a corresponding
 user identifier (such as a SIP URI), can also reveal user roaming.
 Furthermore, a user may not wish to reveal roaming to
 correspondent(s), which translates to the use of a Care-of Address.
 As with a Home Address, the Care-of Address can also reveal the
 topological location of the Mobile Node.
 This document scopes the problem of location privacy for the Mobile
 IP protocol.  The primary goal is to prevent attackers on the path
 between the Mobile Node (MN) and the Correspondent Node (CN) from
 detecting roaming due to the disclosure of the Home Address.  The
 attackers are assumed to be able to observe, modify, and inject
 traffic at one point between the MN and the CN.  The attackers are

Koodli Informational [Page 2] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

 assumed not to be able to observe at multiple points and correlate
 observations to detect roaming.  For this reason, MAC addresses,
 IIDs, and other fields that can be profiled to detect roaming are
 only in scope to the extent that they can be used by an attacker at
 one point.  Upper layer protocol identifiers that expose roaming are
 out of scope except that a solution to the problem described here
 needs to be usable as a building block in solutions to those
 problems.
 This document also considers the problem from the exposure of a
 Care-of Address to the CN.
 This document is only concerned with IP address location privacy in
 the context of Mobile IPv6.  It does not address the overall privacy
 problem.  For instance, it does not address privacy issues related to
 MAC addresses or the relationship of IP and MAC addresses [HADDAD],
 or the Upper Layer Protocol addresses.  Solutions to the problem
 specified here should provide protection against roaming disclosure
 due to using Mobile IPv6 addresses from a visited network.
 This document assumes that the reader is familiar with the basic
 operation of Mobile IPv6 [RFC3775] and the associated terminology
 defined therein.  For convenience, we provide some definitions below.

2. Definitions

 o  Mobile Node (MN): A Mobile IPv6 Mobile Node that freely roams
    around networks
 o  Correspondent Node (CN): A Mobile IPv6 that node corresponds with
    an MN
 o  Home Network: The network where the MN is normally present when it
    is not roaming
 o  Visited Network: A network that an MN uses to access the Internet
    when it is roaming
 o  Home Agent: A router on the MN's home network that provides
    forwarding support when the MN is roaming
 o  Home Address (HoA): The MN's unicast IP address valid on its home
    network
 o  Care-of Address (CoA): The MN's unicast IP address valid on the
    visited network

Koodli Informational [Page 3] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

 o  Reverse Tunneling or Bidirectional Tunneling: A mechanism used for
    packet forwarding between the MN and its Home Agent
 o  Route Optimization: A mechanism that allows direct routing of
    packets between a roaming MN and its CN, without having to
    traverse the home network

3. Problem Definition

3.1. Disclosing the Care-of Address to the Correspondent Node

 When a Mobile IP MN roams from its home network to a visited network
 or from one visited network to another, use of Care-of Address in
 communication with a correspondent reveals that the MN has roamed.
 This assumes that the correspondent is able to associate the Care-of
 Address to the Home Address, for instance, by inspecting the Binding
 Cache Entry.  The Home Address itself is assumed to have been
 obtained by whatever means (e.g., through DNS lookup).

3.2. Revealing the Home Address to Onlookers

 When a Mobile IP MN roams from its home network to a visited network
 or from one visited network to another, use of a Home Address in
 communication reveals to an onlooker that the MN has roamed.  When a
 binding of a Home Address to a user identifier (such as a SIP URI) is
 available, the Home Address can be used to also determine that the
 user has roamed.  This problem is independent of whether the MN uses
 a Care-of Address to communicate directly with the correspondent
 (i.e., uses route optimization), or the MN communicates via the Home
 Agent (i.e., uses reverse tunneling).  Location privacy can be
 compromised when an onlooker is present on the MN - CN path (when
 route optimization is used).  It may also be compromised when the
 onlooker is present on the MN - HA path (when bidirectional tunneling
 without encryption is used; see below).

3.3. Problem Scope

 With existing Mobile IPv6 solutions, there is some protection against
 location privacy.  If a Mobile Node uses reverse tunneling with
 Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) encryption, then the Home
 Address is not revealed on the MN - HA path.  So, eavesdroppers on
 the MN - HA path cannot determine roaming.  They could, however,
 still profile fields in the ESP header; however, this problem is not
 specific to Mobile IPv6 location privacy.
 When an MN uses reverse tunneling (regardless of ESP encryption), the
 correspondent does not have access to the Care-of Address.  Hence, it
 cannot determine that the MN has roamed.

Koodli Informational [Page 4] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

 Hence, the location privacy problem is particularly applicable when
 Mobile IPv6 route optimization is used or when reverse tunneling is
 used without protecting the inner IP packet containing the Home
 Address.

4. Problem Illustration

 This section is intended to provide an illustration of the problem
 defined in the previous section.
 Consider a Mobile Node at its home network.  Whenever it is involved
 in IP communication, its correspondents can see an IP address valid
 on the home network.  Elaborating further, the users involved in
 peer-to-peer communication are likely to see a user-friendly
 identifier such as a SIP URI, and the communication endpoints in the
 IP stack will see IP addresses.  Users uninterested in or unaware of
 IP communication details will not see any difference when the MN
 acquires a new IP address.  Of course, any user can "tcpdump" or
 "ethereal" a session, capture IP packets, and map the MN's IP address
 to an approximate geo-location.  This mapping may reveal the home
 location of a user, but a correspondent cannot ascertain whether the
 user has actually roamed or not.  Assessing the physical location
 based on IP addresses has some similarities to assessing the
 geographical location based on the area code of a telephone number.
 The granularity of the physical area corresponding to an IP address
 can vary depending on how sophisticated the available tools are, how
 often an ISP conducts its network re-numbering, etc.  Also, an IP
 address cannot guarantee that a peer is at a certain geographic area
 due to technologies such as VPN and tunneling.
 When the MN roams to another network, the location privacy problem
 consists of two parts: revealing information to its correspondents
 and to onlookers.
 With its correspondents, the MN can either communicate directly or
 reverse-tunnel its packets through the Home Agent.  Using reverse
 tunneling does not reveal the Care-of Address of the MN, although
 end-to-end delay may vary depending on the particular scenario.  With
 those correspondents with which it can disclose its Care-of Address
 "on the wire", the MN has the option of using route-optimized
 communication.  The transport protocol still sees the Home Address
 with route optimization.  Unless the correspondent runs some packet
 capturing utility, the user cannot see which mode (reverse tunneling
 or route optimization) is being used, but knows that it is
 communicating with the same peer whose URI it knows.  This is similar
 to conversing with a roaming cellphone user whose phone number, like
 the URI, remains unchanged.

Koodli Informational [Page 5] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

 Regardless of whether the MN uses route optimization or reverse
 tunneling (without ESP encryption), its Home Address is revealed in
 data packets.  When equipped with an ability to inspect packets "on
 the wire", an onlooker on the MN - HA path can determine that the MN
 has roamed and could possibly also determine that the user has
 roamed.  This could compromise the location privacy even if the MN
 took steps to hide its roaming information from a correspondent.
 The above description is valid regardless of whether a Home Address
 is statically allocated or is dynamically allocated.  In either case,
 the mapping of IP address to a geo-location will most likely yield
 results with the same level of granularity.  With the freely
 available tools on the Internet, this granularity is the physical
 address of the ISP or the organization that registers ownership of a
 prefix chunk.  Since an ISP or an organization is not, rightly,
 required to provide a blueprint of its subnets, the granularity
 remains fairly coarse for a mobile wireless network.  However,
 sophisticated attackers might be able to conduct site mapping and
 obtain more fine-grained subnet information.
 A compromise in location privacy could lead to more targeted
 profiling of user data.  An eavesdropper may specifically track the
 traffic containing the Home Address, and monitor the movement of the
 Mobile Node with a changing Care-of Address.  The profiling problem
 is not specific to Mobile IPv6, but could be triggered by a
 compromise in location privacy due to revealing the Home Address.  A
 correspondent may take advantage of the knowledge that a user has
 roamed when the Care-of Address is revealed, and modulate actions
 based on such knowledge.  Such information could cause concern to a
 mobile user, especially when the correspondent turns out be
 untrustworthy.  For these reasons, appropriate security measures on
 the management interfaces on the MN to guard against the disclosure
 or misuse of location information should be considered.
 Applying existing techniques to thwart profiling may have
 implications to Mobile IPv6 signaling performance.  For instance,
 changing the Care-of Address often would cause additional Return
 Routability [RFC3775] and binding management signaling.  And,
 changing the Home Address often has implications on IPsec security
 association management.  Careful consideration should be given to the
 signaling cost introduced by changing either the Care-of Address or
 the Home Address.
 When roaming, an MN may treat its home network nodes as any other
 correspondents.  Reverse tunneling is perhaps sufficient for home
 network communication, since route-optimized communication will
 traverse the identical path.  Hence, an MN can avoid revealing its
 Care-of Address to its home network correspondents simply by using

Koodli Informational [Page 6] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

 reverse tunneling.  The Proxy Neighbor Advertisements [RFC2461] from
 the Home Agent could serve as hints to the home network nodes that
 the Mobile Node is away.  However, they will not be able to know the
 Mobile Node's current point of attachment unless the MN uses route
 optimization with them.

5. Conclusion

 In this document, we have discussed the location privacy problem as
 applicable to Mobile IPv6.  The problem can be summarized as follows:
 disclosing the Care-of Address to a correspondent and revealing the
 Home Address to an onlooker can compromise the location privacy of a
 Mobile Node, and hence that of a user.  We have seen that
 bidirectional tunneling allows an MN to protect its Care-of Address
 to the CN.  And, ESP encryption of an inner IP packet allows the MN
 to protect its Home Address from the onlookers on the MN - HA path.
 However, with route optimization, the MN will reveal its Care-of
 Address to the CN.  Moreover, route optimization causes the Home
 Address to be revealed to onlookers in the data packets as well as in
 Mobile IPv6 signaling messages.  The solutions to this problem are
 expected to be protocol specifications that use the existing Mobile
 IPv6 functional entities, namely, the Mobile Node, its Home Agent,
 and the Correspondent Node.

6. Security Considerations

 This document discusses the location privacy problem specific to
 Mobile IPv6.  Any solution must be able to protect (e.g., using
 encryption) the Home Address from disclosure to onlookers in data
 packets when using route optimization or reverse tunneling.  In
 addition, solutions must consider protecting the Mobile IPv6
 signaling messages from disclosing the Home Address along the MN - HA
 and MN - CN paths.
 Disclosing the Care-of Address is inevitable if an MN wishes to use
 route optimization.  Regardless of whether the Care-of Address is an
 on-link address of the MN on the visited link or that of a
 cooperating proxy, mere presence of a Binding Cache Entry is
 sufficient for a CN to ascertain roaming.  Hence, an MN concerned
 with location privacy should exercise prudence in determining whether
 to use route optimization with, especially previously unacquainted,
 correspondents.
 The solutions should also consider the use of temporary addresses and
 their implications on Mobile IPv6 signaling as discussed in Section
 4, "Problem Illustration".  Use of IP addresses with privacy
 extensions [RFC3041] could be especially useful for Care-of Addresses

Koodli Informational [Page 7] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

 if appropriate trade-offs with Return Routability signaling are taken
 into account.

7. Acknowledgments

 James Kempf, Qiu Ying, Sam Xia, and Lakshminath Dondeti are
 acknowledged for their review and feedback.  Thanks to Jari Arkko and
 Kilian Weniger for the last-call review and for suggesting
 improvements and text.  Thanks to Sam Hartman for providing text to
 improve the problem scope.

8. References

8.1. Normative References

 [RFC3775]  Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support
            in IPv6", RFC 3775, June 2004.

8.2. Informative References

 [HADDAD]   Haddad, W., et al., "Privacy for Mobile and Multi-homed
            Nodes: Problem Statement" Work in Progress, June 2006.
 [RFC1035]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
            specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.
 [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
            Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC
            3986, January 2005.
 [RFC2461]  Narten, T., Nordmark, E., and W. Simpson, "Neighbor
            Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)", RFC 2461, December
            1998.
 [RFC2462]  Thomson, S. and T. Narten, "IPv6 Stateless Address
            Autoconfiguration", RFC 2462, December 1998.
 [RFC3041]  Narten, T. and R. Draves, "Privacy Extensions for
            Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6", RFC 3041,
            January 2001.
 [RFC3261]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
            A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
            Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
            June 2002.

Koodli Informational [Page 8] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

 [RFC3825]  Polk, J., Schnizlein, J., and M. Linsner, "Dynamic Host
            Configuration Protocol Option for Coordinate-based
            Location Configuration Information", RFC 3825, July 2004.
 [RFC4301]  Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the
            Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, December 2005.

Koodli Informational [Page 9] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

Appendix A. Background

 The location privacy topic is broad and often has different
 connotations.  It also spans multiple layers in the OSI reference
 model.  Besides, there are attributes beyond an IP address alone that
 can reveal hints about location.  For instance, even if a
 correspondent is communicating with the same endpoint it is used to,
 the "time of day" attribute can reveal a hint to the user.  Some
 roaming cellphone users may have noticed that their SMS messages
 carry a timestamp of their "home network" time zone (for location
 privacy or otherwise), which can reveal that the user is in a
 different time zone when messages are sent during a "normal" time of
 the day.  Furthermore, tools exist on the Internet that can map an IP
 address to the physical address of an ISP or the organization that
 owns the prefix chunk.  Taking this to another step, with built-in
 GPS receivers on IP hosts, applications can be devised to map geo-
 locations to IP network information.  Even without GPS receivers,
 geo-locations can also be obtained in environments where "Geopriv" is
 supported, for instance, as a DHCP option [RFC3825].  In summary, a
 user's physical location can be determined or guessed with some
 certainty and with varying levels of granularity by different means,
 even though IP addresses themselves do not inherently provide any
 geo-location information.  It is perhaps useful to bear this broad
 scope in mind as the problem of IP address location privacy in the
 presence of IP Mobility is addressed.

Author's Address

 Rajeev Koodli
 Nokia Siemens Networks
 313 Fairchild Drive
 Mountain View, CA 94043
 EMail: rajeev.koodli@nokia.com

Koodli Informational [Page 10] RFC 4882 MIP6 Location Privacy May 2007

Full Copyright Statement

 Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).
 This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
 contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
 retain all their rights.
 This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
 "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
 OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND
 THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS
 OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF
 THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
 WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

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Acknowledgement

 Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
 Internet Society.

Koodli Informational [Page 11]

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