> The first packet has a length of 95 and corresponds to the token "Port" which has a length of four. The second packet has a length of 93 and corresponds to the token "ug" which has a length of two, and so on. By removing the likely token envelope from the network packet length, it is easy to infer how many tokens were transmitted and their sequence and individual length just by sniffing encrypted network data.
I would have expected more tokens per packet? One token per packet sounds suspiciously inefficient.