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arxiv 1612.03371 v1 pith:G2WXB54R submitted 2016-12-11 cs.NI cs.CR

Rangzen: Anonymously Getting the Word Out in a Blackout

classification cs.NI cs.CR
keywords rangzenanonymousduringblackoutscommunicationsdesignmessagingnetwork
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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In recent years governments have shown themselves willing to impose blackouts to shut off key communication infrastructure during times of civil strife, and to surveil citizen communications whenever possible. However, it is exactly during such strife that citizens need reliable and anonymous communications the most. In this paper, we present Rangzen, a system for anonymous broadcast messaging during network blackouts. Rangzen is distinctive in both aim and design. Our aim is to provide an anonymous, one-to-many messaging layer that requires only users' smartphones and can withstand network-level attacks. Our design is a delay-tolerant mesh network which deprioritizes adversarial messages by means of a social graph while preserving user anonymity. We built a complete implementation that runs on Android smartphones, present benchmarks of its performance and battery usage, and present simulation results suggesting Rangzen's efficacy at scale.

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Cited by 2 Pith papers

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. TrustMix: How to Mix Messages in a Mobile Ad-hoc Network

    cs.CR 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    TrustMix enables anonymous messaging in MANETs without central trusted parties by routing through trusted groups with shuffling and using linkable ring signatures for rate limiting, with a security proof in the random...

  2. Cache to the Future: A Distributed Webpage Archive for Internet Blackouts

    cs.CR 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    CttF is a distributed webpage archive that crowdsources static content caching via community ratings and cryptographic protections, shown in simulations to deliver content at city scale during blackouts.