On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 9:45 PM, Andrew Lewman wrote:
> The browser bundle is for tor clients, not relays. If you want to run a
> relay, on unixes, then install tor and configure it as a relay.
>
> We make an assumption that if you are running some sort of unix, you
> can handle your package mana
> Hi! I've got tor exit relay running on a dedicated host! About to upgrade
>
> it in a week too! High five to everyone making this project a reality.
Thanks for hosting an exit relay.
> I'm
> wanting all my apps on my desktop to use tor, what is the recommended
> method?
> polipo or privoxy + to
Hi! I've got tor exit relay running on a dedicated host! About to upgrade
it in a week too! High five to everyone making this project a reality.
I'm wanting all my apps on my desktop to use tor, what is the recommended
method? polipo or privoxy + tor? Do i really need nph-proxy?
Is this if you a
> We make an assumption that if you are running some sort of
> unix, you
> can handle your package management system, or compile from source,
> and
> edit the torrc file.
No good assumption. Using unix doesn't make you a geek. Ubuntu is one of the
most widespread AND newbie friendly distribution.
On Wed, 11 Apr 2012 13:41:30 -0400
Sam Whited wrote:
> When requesting bridge addresses via the email system, it only accepts
> emails from gmail.com, yahoo.com, and mit.edu.
> What's the process for adding domains to this list (or is there one)?
I don't believe there is a process per se. We chos
On Sat, 14 Apr 2012 19:29:13 +
hepta tor wrote:
> the IP anonymity test at http://ip-check.info/ suggests that
> browser.cache.memory.enable should be set to 'false'. in TBB
The question to ask is 'why does it suggest this?'
The 'new identity' function in TBB will clear memory cache when in
On Mon, 16 Apr 2012 16:43:23 +0200
Agapetos wrote:
> Hmm... I'm a bit sad to hear that because it's very inconvenient for
> some of us to run Firefox 24/7 just because we'd like to help the
> network with relaying. Perhaps in the future you will make it a bit
> more user-friendly in this regard.
On 4/16/2012 12:58 PM, AK wrote:
I think this should work:
1) Remove the lines:
BrowserDirectory=.
BrowserExecutable=firefox
from Data/Vidalia/vidalia.conf
2) Add the line
SocksPort 9050
to Data/Tor/torrc
3)./App/Firefox/firefox -P no-remote
and create and run a new profile with Data/prof
I don't think that's a clean and easy solution. Your tool laying around on some
third party server and barely anyone being aware and using it.
Possible solutions:
- As a intermediate fix: Simply change the Windows behavior, not to close
Vidalia/Tor when Firefox is terminated. (Like already on Li
I think this should work:
1) Remove the lines:
BrowserDirectory=.
BrowserExecutable=firefox
from Data/Vidalia/vidalia.conf
2) Add the line
SocksPort 9050
to Data/Tor/torrc
3)./App/Firefox/firefox -P no-remote
and create and run a new profile with Data/profile as the directory
On Mon, Apr 1
On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 9:39 AM, Andrew Lewman wrote:
>
> For some reason on linux, when closing firefox, it doesn't kill
> vidalia. On osx and windows, closing firefox correctly closes vidalia.
Just a correction: On OS X 10.6.8 Vidalia remains open when I quite
the TBB FireFox. best, Joe
--
Jo
Ok, understandable.
then again, SocksPort is just one line.. I mean one could write a simple
script and publish it for such users (which I might do in order to stop
this drooling of mine);
one finds the line, and changes the port number. Problem #1 solved?
For relaying, it is a matter of uncomme
> I'm sorry because I haven't read the entire conversation up until now, but
>
> if people are using Ubuntu, what is stopping them from doing
> sudo apt-get
> install tor;
Will conflict with Tor Browser Bundle. (SocksPort on same port.)
> configuring relaying in torrc
Vidalia was made for
I'm sorry because I haven't read the entire conversation up until now, but
if people are using Ubuntu, what is stopping them from doing
sudo apt-get install tor;
configuring relaying in torrc and using the Firefox/Aurora/whichever
browser from TBB (would need to change the listen port, etc.)
On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 2:41 PM, wrote:
> In meanwhile I did setup a workaround for your issue. Please test and
> leave feedback.
>
> https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/doc/TorifyHOWTO/WebBrowsers#LeaveVidaliaRunningwhileclosingFirefoxTorBrowserUNTESTED
>
OK, I just tried this and it
Hmm... I'm a bit sad to hear that because it's very inconvenient for some
of us to run Firefox 24/7 just because we'd like to help the network with
relaying. Perhaps in the future you will make it a bit more user-friendly
in this regard.
___
tor-talk mail
- Forwarded message from Chad Hurley -
From: Chad Hurley
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2012 09:44:32 -0400
To: liberationt...@lists.stanford.edu
Subject: [liberationtech] TOR router on D2Plug...
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64;
rv:11.0) Gecko/20120329 Thunderbird/11.0.1
Hi All;
> The only safe way to start TBB is to run 'start-tor-browser'. Any
> other
> method will cause TBB to be in some odd state.
Can you expand this please? Odd state in sense of no functionality or negative
implications on anonymity?
__
powered
On Mon, 16 Apr 2012 11:45:54 +0200
Agapetos wrote:
> My computer is old and I can't afford to run Firefox non-stop, so I
> close it when I don't use it and leave Vidalia running (I have a
> relay set up). When I try to run Firefox again from
> "tor-browser_en-US/App/Firefox/" directory by clicking
It is really weird, that Vidalia closes by default, when you close Firefox.
There is no option to change that. It does not make sense, if people are
expected, to enable contributing to the Tor network using Vidalia. No one can
be expected to leave Firefox running 24/7. Do we have a ticket about
Greetings,
I'm a newbie in Onionland—I installed TBB on my Linux machine 2 days
ago—and I have a question:
My computer is old and I can't afford to run Firefox non-stop, so I close
it when I don't use it and leave Vidalia running (I have a relay set up).
When I try to run Firefox again from "tor-
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