Tor's bandwidth-weighted path selection creates a structural amplification: 60% of middle routers selected across 430 circuits had bandwidth above 1 MB/s, yet only 10% of all Tor routers exceed 1 MB/s. This skew means that an adversary advertising a single high-bandwidth middle node achieves selection probability far exceeding its proportional count in the network, making high-bandwidth Sybil nodes highly cost-effective for bridge discovery.
From 2012-ling-extensive — Extensive Analysis and Large-Scale Empirical Evaluation of Tor Bridge Discovery
· §V-B, Fig. 8, Fig. 9
· 2012
· INFOCOM
Implications
Avoid advertising high bandwidth for bridge-supporting infrastructure; capping the advertised bandwidth of nodes in bridge circuits reduces the probability that a high-bandwidth malicious node appears in a bridge's circuit path.
Consider flattening or randomizing bandwidth weighting specifically for middle-node selection in bridge-entry circuits, accepting a modest throughput penalty to reduce the disproportionate influence of high-bandwidth adversarial nodes.