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M. K. Reiter, A.D. Rubin, "Crowds: Anonymous Web Transactions", Transactions on Information System Security 1 (1), ACM, 1998.

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This paper is cited in the following contexts:
The Sybil Attack - Douceur (2002)   (176 citations)  (Correct)

....systems commonly rely on the existence of multiple, independent remote entities to mitigate the threat of hostile peers. Many systems [3, 4, 8, 10, 17, 18, 29, 34, 36] replicate computational or storage tasks among several remote sites to protect against integrity violations (data loss) Others [5, 6, 7, 16, 28]fragment tasks among several remote sites to protect against privacy violations (data leakage) In either case, exploiting the redundancy in the system requires the ability to determine whether two ostensibly different remote entities are actually different. Use of the plural pronoun is ....

M. K. Reiter, A.D. Rubin, "Crowds: Anonymous Web Transactions", Transactions on Information System Security 1 (1), ACM, 1998.


A Practical Mix - Jakobsson (1998)   (29 citations)  (Correct)

....and outputs a permuted list of function evaluations (typically decryptions) of the input items, without revealing the relationship between input and output elements. Mix networks were introduced by Chaum in 1981 [4] as a primitive for privacy. Although alternative primitives for privacy (e.g. [27]) can be used where users trust each other to some extent, for most applications, mix networks still today remain the only realistic method to ensure connection privacy in settings like the Internet. Consequently, mixnetworks have seen many applications since they were introduced, spanning the ....

M. Reiter, A. Rubin, "Crowds: Anonymous Web Transactions," Manuscript at www.research.att.com/projects/crowds/


On Secure and Pseudonymous Client-Relationships.. - Bleichenbacher.. (1998)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

....Exchange Protocol allowing parties to send individual messages to each other anonymously and to reply to a received message. Implementation efforts for approximating anonymous networks are being carried out by several research groups (e.g. anonymous routing [SGR97] and anonymous Web traffic [SGR97, RR97]) Besides that, there are several anonymous remailers available for either e mail communication (see, e.g. GWB97, GT96, B96, E96] or Web browsing (see, e.g. Anon] We will discuss some of these in more detail later. We view our goal as complementary: All of the above work tries to find ....

....and a server. Consequently, a server can easily obtain the particular subnet in which a client is located. In many cases, this degree of anonymity is sufficient, for example, if the client is a subscriber of a large ISP, or an employee of a large company. In the language of Reiter and Rubin ([RR97]) the anonymity of such a client is somewhere between probable innocence and beyond suspicion. Alternatively, our method can be used in conjunction with existing remailers to enable a client to interact with a server without revealing the particular subnet. We elaborate on this point in Section ....

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M. Reiter, A. Rubin, Crowds: Anonymous Web Transactions. Manuscript at http://www.research.att.com/projects/crowds/.

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