English

FAIR: Forwarding Accountability for Internet Reputability

Networking and Internet Architecture 2016-05-09 v5

Abstract

This paper presents FAIR, a forwarding accountability mechanism that incentivizes ISPs to apply stricter security policies to their customers. The Autonomous System (AS) of the receiver specifies a traffic profile that the sender AS must adhere to. Transit ASes on the path mark packets. In case of traffic profile violations, the marked packets are used as a proof of misbehavior. FAIR introduces low bandwidth overhead and requires no per-packet and no per-flow state for forwarding. We describe integration with IP and demonstrate a software switch running on commodity hardware that can switch packets at a line rate of 120 Gbps, and can forward 140M minimum-sized packets per second, limited by the hardware I/O subsystem. Moreover, this paper proposes a "suspicious bit" for packet headers - an application that builds on top of FAIR's proofs of misbehavior and flags packets to warn other entities in the network.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1501.07586,
  title  = {FAIR: Forwarding Accountability for Internet Reputability},
  author = {Christos Pappas and Raphael M. Reischuk and Adrian Perrig},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1501.07586},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

16 pages, 12 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T08:16:07.563Z