For Linux we've got: https://github.com/micahflee/torbrowser-launcher -
although could use a more active maintainer to make it work under MacOSX
and Windows as well, and it's almost a Debian package.
All the best,
Jurre
On 06/06/2014 06:01 AM, Israel Leiva wrote:
>
>
> https://check.torprojec
Heya,
The company I work for is building an OpenVPN client which has obfsproxy
support, there is a branch, but it's not finished:
https://github.com/greenhost/viper/tree/obfsproxy-support
And then.. the serverside isn't pushed but it was working, it would
generate scramblesuite passwords using so
Hey George,
Thanks for letting me know. We'll try it out this week and let you and
the tor-dev list know.
All the best,
Jurre
On 02/10/2014 04:07 PM, George Kadianakis wrote:
> Hey Jurre,
>
> till we fix #9221 (the issue of obfsproxy not having a SOCKS5
> listener), you might be able to work aro
On 10/09/2013 06:04 PM, Tom Lowenthal wrote:
> Hello hello,
>
> This is your roughly 60-minute reminder that we'll be comparing
> proposals for the IM browser bundle on #tor-dev in about an hour. For
> your reference, and to brush up on the research that everyone
> valiantly did, the analyses are:
On 10/07/2013 08:44 PM, intrigeri wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Jurre van Bergen wrote (07 Oct 2013 17:21:42 GMT) :
>> Below you can find the analysis of xmpp-client for the Attentive otter
>> project, written by dgoulet, nickm, arlo, asn and myself.
> Thanks a lot.
>
>> *Linu
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hoi,
Below you can find the analysis of xmpp-client for the Attentive otter
project, written by dgoulet, nickm, arlo, asn and myself.
All the best,
Jurre
-
Intro
xmpp-client is a simple XMPP client written in pure Go with OTRv2
support.