On Fri, Feb 16, 2018 at 7:12 AM, wrote:
> If you use meek-amazon or meek-azure.How does it affect opportunity
> correlation attack? (Suppose the enemy watches my traffic only between my ISP
> and domain front and between exit relay and website)
Tor isn't really designed or capable to protect a
I've looked around a bit and wonder how to launch new tabs from the
shell into a running TBB instance.
I see how to do it to create a new instance but would like to work with
one that is already running. Also which documentation should I check
for this info?
/Lars
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Lars Noodén:
> I've looked around a bit and wonder how to launch new tabs from the
> shell into a running TBB instance.
$ ./Browser/start-tor-browser --allow-remote # for the master process
$ ./Browser/start-tor-browser --allow-remote --new-tab example.com
> Also which documentation should I che
I thought it might be interesting for others to hear some of the
questions that arose in the discussion at the NYC Tor event on Feb 15
this past week.
https://blog.torproject.org/explore-tor-nyc-meetup-feb-15/
This list isn't exhaustive, but it may connect with others on this list,
and could poss
I recall I encountered an node-box technology on Wikipedia, designed for
running tamper-proof Tor nodes such that monitoring was impossible: the system
was designed to allow for boot and key authentication only, and could not be
snooped. I seem to be unable now to locate the page, but this would
George:
> I thought it might be interesting for others to hear some of the
> questions that arose in the discussion at the NYC Tor event on Feb 15
> this past week.
>
> https://blog.torproject.org/explore-tor-nyc-meetup-feb-15/
>
> This list isn't exhaustive, but it may connect with others on thi
I am putting Tor on the back seat after months and months of arduously trying
to improve Linux distros (several) for this purpose, and looking at the various
sec options on offer including Tor, in part for precisely the reasons being
described, albeit observed in the Tor Browser Bundle and in se
Does anyone know why Tor Talk entries are consistently flagged as failing
domain authentication, thereby as potentially spoofed?
Sent from [ProtonMail](https://protonmail.com), Swiss-based encrypted email.
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On 02/17/2018 07:52 PM, Rusty Bird wrote:
> Lars Nood�n:
>> I've looked around a bit and wonder how to launch new tabs from the
>> shell into a running TBB instance.
>
> $ ./Browser/start-tor-browser --allow-remote # for the master process
> $ ./Browser/start-tor-browser --allow-remote --new-tab
On Sat, Feb 17, 2018 at 09:29:15PM +0200, Lars Noodén wrote:
> On 02/17/2018 07:52 PM, Rusty Bird wrote:
> > Lars Nood�n:
> >> I've looked around a bit and wonder how to launch new tabs from the
> >> shell into a running TBB instance.
> >
> > $ ./Browser/start-tor-browser --allow-remote # for the
You are already using protonmail, so you are already a shill. Electronic
devices leave signatures and vulnerable to collection & traffic analysis. I
would suggest removing all electronics from your residence and relaxing for a
while. Take a break as you say, all systems have flaws. Rely on PGP f
On 02/17/2018 10:17 PM, Matthew Finkel wrote:
>...
> That's surprising. I just tested it with a fresh Tor Browser
> installation on 64-bit Linux and it worked without an error. A couple
>
> questions:
> - What version of Tor Browser are you using?
> - Press the Alt key, then select the Help
Lars Noodén:
> On 02/17/2018 07:52 PM, Rusty Bird wrote:
> > $ ./Browser/start-tor-browser --allow-remote # for the master process
> > $ ./Browser/start-tor-browser --allow-remote --new-tab example.com
> Thanks, I've tried those before. When launching with --new-tab:
>
> $ ./Browser/start-tor-
On 02/17/2018 10:28 PM, Rusty Bird wrote:
>...
>> The --allow-remote --new-tab method works fine with unmodified Firefox,
>> just not with TBB.
>
> Strange, it works here with TB 7.5 on Whonix. If you really started
> the _master_ process (not just the tab opener!) using --allow-remote
> as well,
Lars Noodén:
> Just a guess but would I have to specify a particular browser profile as
> well if there are multiple instance of Firefox running concurrently in
> the same account?
I'd definitely try that, in various combinations.
Last time I looked into it, firefox --allow-remote used some baroq
It's a commonly known issue with mailing lists
If you've got DKIM enabled on your domain example.com, when mailman (or
whatever) inserts headers the hash will no longer match.
If you've got SPF enabled on example.com then the mailing list server
almost certainly isn't included. When the receiving
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