* Erinn Clark [2014:05:01 22:41 -0400]:
> Dear Tor Trac users,
>
> We learned on recently that there was a bug in our Trac setup that allowed
> anyone to register a new user account for an existing user name, overwriting
> the existing user's password and thereby taking over the account [0].
I
Dear Tor Trac users,
We learned on recently that there was a bug in our Trac setup that allowed
anyone to register a new user account for an existing user name, overwriting
the existing user's password and thereby taking over the account [0].
A workaround was quickly implemented by weasel to prev
Hi Everyone,
I'm a student completing my Bachelor's degree in Computer Science at
Stanford. This summer I'm going to be working with Tor for Google Summer of
Code 2014. I'll be packaging a tool to allow non-technical users to monitor
censorship of Tor occurring in their country/network
My project
El 30/04/14 17:06, Christopher Baines escribió:
On 08/10/13 06:52, Christopher Baines wrote:
I have been looking at doing some work on Tor as part of my degree, and
more specifically, looking at Hidden Services. One of the issues where I
believe I might be able to make some progress, is the Hidd
Jonathan Baker writes:
> Thanks for the welcome. I registered on Trac as jondbaker, but upon
> authenticating don't see a link/button to edit the overview page and
> add myself as a contributor.
It's at the very bottom.
> After reviewing the tickets tagged weather-rewrite, I think #11141
> woul
Thanks for the welcome. I registered on Trac as jondbaker, but upon
authenticating don't see a link/button to edit the overview page and add
myself as a contributor.
After reviewing the tickets tagged weather-rewrite, I think #11141 would be
a good place to start. Writing unit (and potentially int
On Thu, May 01, 2014 at 09:37:12 -0400, Nick Mathewson wrote:
> I think the only change we'll need for this case is to add URLs for
> the microdescriptor consensus diffs.
Cool.
> This nice thing about this approach is that the client doesn't need to
> know whether the directory supports consensus
Hi all. This April's status report is gonna be short and sweet. The bulk of my
time went toward Google Summer of Code student selection. I'm delighted to
announce that we have thirteen great students working with us this summer
(twelve with Tor and one with the EFF)! This is twice as many as last y
> That script is stable, no bug reports in a while, stem is working fine. :)
Great!
> That authentication line and "password" is only in there to make stem
> happy.
Stem should be perfectly fine without providing a password (that's an
optional argument). If your proxy handles the authentication
On Thu, May 01, 2014 at 09:27:38 -0400, Nick Mathewson wrote:
> One alternative in this case would be to include non-running relays in
> the consensus. This would make each individual consensus longer, but
> (if your guess is right) might make compressed diffs shorter.
That's an interesting idea.
Hi Damian,
thank you for your e-mail!
That script is stable, no bug reports in a while, stem is working fine. :)
That authentication line and "password" is only in there to make stem
happy. help_check_tor_bootstrap.py/stem isn't "really" using Tor's
control port. It connects to Control Port Filt
Hi adrelanos, I just noticed that Whonix uses Stem. That's great! Just
a few quick thoughts...
https://github.com/Whonix/Whonix/blob/master/whonix_shared/usr/lib/whonixcheck/help_check_tor_bootstrap.py
> with Controller.from_port(port = p) as controller:
>
> if os.path.exists("/usr/share/whonix
On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 4:02 AM, Daniel Martí wrote:
> Hello everyone,
>
> Last week I introduced myself [0] on this list, shortly after being
> accepted into GSoC to work on Consensus Diffs. My GSoC proposal is
> heavily based on the Tor proposal #140 [1], which is close to being six
> years old n
On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 4:17 AM, Roger Dingledine wrote:
> On Thu, May 01, 2014 at 10:02:30AM +0200, Daniel Martí wrote:
>> * Regarding their size, #140 suggests that they are not useful past 16
>> hours. I thought we could compare the compressed size of the diffs
>> when creating them, since t
Ahmed:
> Is this the latest version of Tor specification protocol?
>
> https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git?a=blob_plain;hb=HEAD;f=tor-spec.txt
You will find the latest specifications in that Git repository, yes.
--
Lunar
signature.asc
Descrip
Hello Everyone,
Is this the latest version of Tor specification protocol?
https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git?a=blob_plain;hb=HEAD;f=tor-spec.txt
--
Ahmed
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On 01/05/14 08:33, Abhiram Chintangal wrote:
> Jonathan,
>
> Glad that you are interested in working on Weather. Your experience with
> Django can certainly come in handy.
>
> The wiki-page[1] for the project houses all the information you need to
> get started. It has links to the repositories a
On Thu, May 01, 2014 at 10:02:30AM +0200, Daniel Martí wrote:
> * Regarding their size, #140 suggests that they are not useful past 16
> hours. I thought we could compare the compressed size of the diffs
> when creating them, since they may be of use for a longer time. We
> could do this rela
Hello everyone,
Last week I introduced myself [0] on this list, shortly after being
accepted into GSoC to work on Consensus Diffs. My GSoC proposal is
heavily based on the Tor proposal #140 [1], which is close to being six
years old now.
This is why, after some discussion with Nick, Sebastian and
Jonathan,
Glad that you are interested in working on Weather. Your experience with
Django can certainly come in handy.
The wiki-page[1] for the project houses all the information you need to
get started. It has links to the repositories and tickets that we are
working on.
I beleive that regular
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