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[tor-dev] UX improvement proposal: Onion auto-redirects using Alt-Svc HTTP header
UX improvement proposal: Onion auto-redirects using Alt-Svc HTTP header
========================================================================
1. Motivation:
Lots of high-profile websites have onion addresses these days (e.g. Tor ,
NYT, blockchain, ProPublica). All those websites seem confused on what's
the right way to inform their users about their onion addresses. Here are
some confusion examples:
a) torproject.org does not even advertise their onion address to Tor users (!!!)
b) blockchain.info throws an ugly ASCII page to Tor users mentioning their onion
address and completely wrecking the UX (loses URL params, etc.)
c) ProPublica has a "Browse via Tor" section which redirects to the onion site.
Ideally there would be a consistent way for websites to inform their users
about their onion counterpart. This would provide the following positives:
+ Tor users would use onions more often. That's important for user
education and user perception, and also to partially dispell the darkweb myth.
+ Website operators wouldn't have to come up with ad-hoc ways to advertise
their onion services, which sometimes results in complete breakage of
the user experience (particularly with blockchain)
This proposal specifies a simple way forward here that's far from perfect,
but can still provide benefits and also improve user-education around onions
so that in the future we could employ more advanced techniques.
Also see Tor ticket #21952 for more discussion on this:
https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/21952
2. Proposal
Websites use the Alt-Svc HTTP header to specify their onion counterpart:
http://httpwg.org/http-extensions/alt-svc.html
The Tor Browser intercepts that header (if any) and auto-redirects the user
to the onion site. Tor Browser only does so if the header is served over HTTPS.
(That's it.)
3. Improvements
3.1. User education through notifications
To minimize the probability of users freaking out about auto-redirects Tor
Browser could inform the user that the auto-redirect is happening. This
could happen with a small notification bar [*] below the URL bar informing
users that "Tor Browser is auto-redirecting you to the secure onion site".
The notification bar could also have a question mark button that provides
the user with additional information on the merits of onion sites and why
they should like them.
[*]: like this one: http://www.topdreamweaverextensions.com/UserFiles/Image/firefox-bar.jpg
3.2. Auto-redirects too intrusive? Make them optional.
If we think that auto redirects are too intrusive, we should consider making
them optional, or letting the website specify the desired behavior.
If a website wants to specify an onion address but doesn't like
auto-redirects, it could specify that as part of Alt-Svc and we could still
inform the user that an onion is available using a notification bar again.
4. Drawbacks
This proposal is far from the perfect solution of course. Here are a few
reasons why:
4.1. Auto-redirects are scary
Novice users or paranoid users might freak out with auto-redirects since
it's unexpected. They might think they are under attack or they got hacked.
An argument against that is that we are already using HTTPS-everywhere which
is basically a redirection layer, and while its redirection technique is
simpler, sometimes the derivative URL is not similar to the original URL,
and we still don't see people freaking out. I think that's because people
trust Tor Browser to do the right thing. Combining this knowledge with
section 3.1 might solve this problem.
4.2. No security/performance benefits
While we could come up with auto-redirect proposals that provide security
and performance benefits, this proposal does not actually provide any of
those.
As a matter of fact, the security remains the same as connecting to normal
websites (since we trust its HTTP headers), and the performance gets worse
since we first need to connect to the website, get its headers, and then
also connect to the onion.
Still _all_ the website approaches mentioned in the "Motivation" section
suffer from the above drawbacks, and sysadmins still come up with ad-hoc
ways to inform users abou their onions. So this simple proposal will still
help those websites and also pave the way forward for future auto-redirect
techniques.
4.3. Alt-Svc does not do exactly what we want
I read in a blog post [*] that using Alt-Svc header "doesn’t change the URL
in the location bar, document.location or any other indication of where the
resource is; this is a “layer below” the URL.". IIUC, this is not exactly
what we want because users will not notice the onion address, they will not
get the user education part of the proposal and their connection will still
be slowed down.
I think we could perhaps change this in Tor Browser so that it rewrites the
onion address to make it clear to people that they are now surfing the
onionspace.
[*]: https://www.mnot.net/blog/2016/03/09/alt-svc
5. The future
As I said this is just a simple proposal to introduce the auto-redirect
concept to people, and also to help some sysadmins who are currently coming
up with weird ways to inform people about their onions. It's not the best
way to do this, but it's definitely one of the simplest ways.
In the future we could implement with more advanced auto-redirect proposals like:
a) Have a "domains to onions" map into HTTPS-everywhere and have it do the
autoredirects for us (performance benefits, and security benefits under many
threat models).
b) Bake onion addresses into SSL certificates and Let's Encrypt as suggested
by comment:42 in #21952.
But both of the designs above require non-trivial engineering/policy work
and would still confuse people. So I think starting with a simple approach
that will educate users and then moving to more advanced designs is a more
normative way to go.
======================================================================
Let me know what you think :)
(Should this be part of torspec?)
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