>> I subscribe to a vpn service, can tor run with this service on, or should I
>> not
>> get tor, or what?
>
> Yes, Tor will connect through the VPN service. Your ISP will see that
> you're using the VPN service, but won't see Tor connections. The Tor
> network will see your VPN service gateway in
> I probably lack some context here, but you may also want to look into
> Onionoo instead of blutmagie which is currently unmaintained:
Ditto on the suggestion of not using the old 'torstatus' screens
as afaik there are only two of them running and I'm not so sure
either of them have up to date Ge
On 6/7/2013 9:34 AM, Eugen Leitl wrote:
- Forwarded message from Richard Brooks -
Date: Fri, 07 Jun 2013 10:20:26 -0400
From: Richard Brooks
To: liberationt...@lists.stanford.edu
Subject: Re: [liberationtech] *NSA, FBI, Verizon caught red handed spying on US
citizens in the US*
Not d
- Forwarded message from Richard Brooks -
Date: Fri, 07 Jun 2013 10:20:26 -0400
From: Richard Brooks
To: liberationt...@lists.stanford.edu
Subject: Re: [liberationtech] NSA, FBI, Verizon caught red handed spying on US
citizens in the US
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:17.0)
On 06/07/2013 10:13 AM, Frederick Jakubowsi wrote:
> Will using a APN service and TOR together hide my ISP and my browsing
> activity
> from all, or just use one of them?
Both Tor and VPN services hide your browsing activity from your ISP, and
hide your ISP assigned IP address from websites tha
On 06/07/2013 10:11 AM, Frederick Jakubowsi wrote:
> I subscribe to a vpn service, can tor run with this service on, or should I
> not
> get tor, or what?
> Thanks
Yes, Tor will connect through the VPN service. Your ISP will see that
you're using the VPN service, but won't see Tor connections.
On 6/7/13 1:49 PM, Mike Hearn wrote:
> Thanks for the explanation. For now we're in the middle of including the
> blutmagie list. But yes, switching off the entire system if there's
> evidence of recent Tor usage is an alternative approach we should consider.
I probably lack some context here, but
Thanks for the explanation. For now we're in the middle of including the
blutmagie list. But yes, switching off the entire system if there's
evidence of recent Tor usage is an alternative approach we should consider.
On Fri, Jun 7, 2013 at 1:42 PM, tagnaq wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
> The issue is that we're scraping
> http://exitlist.torproject.org/exit-addresses and, for example,
> 50.7.228.92 does not appear in that list. However, it is listed on
> torstatus.blutmagie.de and apparently it is exiting traffic.
I suppose it i
On 06.06.2013 03:35, krishna e bera wrote:
> The exit probability isnt necessarily a reflection of need. For
> example, there could be a sizable portion of Tor users that want to exit
> in {US} in order to access American based websites that block other
> countries.
Stable exit nodes can not only
Will using a APN service and TOR together hide my ISP and my browsing activity
from all, or just use one of them?
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I subscribe to a vpn service, can tor run with this service on, or should I not
get tor, or what?
Thanks
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No Such Agency has probably had its hooks in Tor all along and used it
to concentrate dissidents and others for convenience.
-Original Message-
From: krishna e bera
To: tor-talk
Sent: Thu, Jun 6, 2013 10:39 pm
Subject: [tor-talk] NSA PRISM implications for Tor
https://www.eff.org/de
On Jun 7, 2013, at 8:23 AM, Mysterious Flyer wrote:
> Why oh why can I not access any of the onion sites listed on the hidden wiki?
> They all time out. Did I do something to make the Onion Master mad? Does
> everyone else have the same problem? I have a typical 64-bit computer
> running W
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