Towards a Tectonic Traffic Shift? Investigating Apple's New Relay Network
Authors: Patrick Sattler, Juliane Aulbach, Johannes Zirngibl, Georg Carle
Published in Proc. ACM Int. Measurement Conference (IMC), 2022
Abstract:
Apple recently published its first Beta of the iCloud Private Relay, a privacy protection service with promises resembling the ones of VPNs. The architecture consists of two layers (ingress and egress), operated by disjoint providers. The service is directly integrated into Apple's operating systems, providing a low entry-level barrier for a large user base. It seems to be set up for significant adoption with its relatively moderate entry-level price.This paper analyzes the iCloud Private Relay from a network perspective, its effect on the Internet, and future measurement-based research. We perform EDNS0 Client Subnet DNS queries to collect ingress relay addresses and find 1586 IPv4 addresses. Supplementary RIPE Atlas DNS measurements reveal 1575 IPv6 addresses. Knowing these addresses helps to detect clients communicating through the relay network passively. According to our scans, ingress addresses grew by 20% from January through April. Moreover, according to our RIPE Atlas DNS measurements, 5.3% of all probes use a resolver that blocks access to iCloud Private Relay.The analysis of our scans through the relay network verifies Apple's claim of rotating egress addresses. Nevertheless, it reveals that ingress and egress relays can be located in the same autonomous system, thus sharing similar routes, potentially allowing traffic correlation.
Recommended citation: Patrick Sattler, Juliane Aulbach, Johannes Zirngibl, Georg Carle, "Towards a Tectonic Traffic Shift? Investigating Apple's New Relay Network." Proc. ACM Int. Measurement Conference (IMC), 2022.