Content inconsistency — transmitting non-native payloads (e.g., modem signals or general web traffic) over VBR-encoded VoIP/video channels — is sufficient for censors to detect camouflage systems via packet-length traffic analysis. Channel inconsistency — requiring reliable transport over a loss-tolerant UDP channel — allows selective disruption: dropping 5% of packets stalls SkypeMorph indefinitely, and dropping 90% for under one second desynchronizes the FreeWave modem.
From 2014-li-facet — Facet: Streaming over Videoconferencing for Censorship Circumvention
· §3.3
· 2014
· Workshop on Privacy in the Electronic Society
Implications
Circumvention systems using VoIP/video cover protocols must transmit only content with natural codec statistics; tunneling arbitrary TCP traffic over VBR video leaks a distinguishable fingerprint regardless of encryption.
Match the channel reliability model of the cover protocol exactly — do not layer reliable delivery over a lossy-tolerant transport, as this creates an orthogonal disruption vector.