Tor worked fine until a few days ago. Then I began to have some problems. Let
me explain.
I use apt-get install tor and run 'tor'. The results are:
May 11 21:19:08.358 [notice] Tor v0.2.2.35 (git-73ff13ab3cc9570d). This is
experimental software. Do not rely on it for strong anonymity. (Runnin
> > echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_rfc1337
>
> not the right option; this is different, and to avoid an issue with time wait.
>
> the feature i'm thinking of is time-wait negotiation, which can be
> tweaked to always put this state on the peer (or fail if not
> available).
>
> last time i mess
On 5/11/2012 7:21 AM, Maxim Kammerer wrote:
On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 2:36 AM, Joe Btfsplk wrote:
Isn't this approach very much a double edged sword? From the link:
However, we recommend that even users who know how to use NoScript leave
JavaScript enabled if possible, because a website or exit
Much appreciated!
Yes, can anyone suggest email providers that will protect privacy and still
work easily with Tor (? that don't require j's).
> Date: Wed, 9 May 2012 22:04:58 -0500
> From: joebtfs...@gmx.com
> To: tor-talk@lists.torproject.org
> Subject: Re: [tor-talk] Basic questions from ne
https://help.riseup.net/en/email
--SiNA
On 05/12/2012 03:16 PM, Elena Johnson wrote:
>
> Much appreciated!
>
> Yes, can anyone suggest email providers that will protect privacy and still
> work easily with Tor (? that don't require j's).
>
>> Date: Wed, 9 May 2012 22:04:58 -0500
>> From: joe
1) "TBB is modified so that JavaScript shouldn't hurt anonymity."
OK so I can safely allow JavaScript with my emails and be anonymous.
Confusing because NoScript says:
"Allow scripts globally (dangerous)."
2) "The TorBrowserBundle (TBB) should allow scripting by default"
Confusing because when