On Wed, 03 Jul 2013 23:59:08 +
andrew wrote:
> Its the holiday, lets dream a little.
https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/org/sponsors/SponsorZ is
our collecting place for dreams of tor.
--
Andrew
http://tpo.is/contact
pgp 0x6B4D6475
___
On Wed, Jul 3, 2013, at 07:05 PM, Roger Dingledine wrote:
> Tor 0.2.4.15-rc is the first release candidate for the Tor 0.2.4.x
> series. It fixes a few smaller bugs, but generally appears stable.
> Please test it and let us know whether it is!
>
I see the compilation process proceed differently
I've always wanted an easy script to just create a tor hidden service out
of an existing website. (Eg, if you use Dreamhost, just run a script and
your public site will also be a hidden service). This would seriously
diversify hidden services.
On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 7:59 PM, andrew wrote:
>
On Wed, 2013-07-03 at 19:21 -0400, Griffin Boyce wrote:
> I don't use Tor with Gmail, because Google blocks connections nearly 100%
> of the time.
A Google employee posted how to avoid this -- you have to log into Gmail
via Tor, solve whatever security puzzle they give you, then (using a
non-Torbr
On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 3:43 PM, anonymous coward wrote:
> How do you folks use Tor? Do you use it permanently for all your network
> connections or only from time to time for certain activities?
>
I use it at home until I run into a site that doesn't work well with tor.
> I think for certain t
In an recent email, Mike Perry said that he would like to
Change: the security of keys on the Guard nodes and the directory
authority keys. and
We have tickets for these issues and I they are on the agenda.
I am sure there are other features that you might want that you have not
sent in a ticket f
I utilize Tor for a lot of my connections, but having said that, it's
easier to list the instances when I don't use Tor.
I do a lot of network-related development at work. Using Tor would skew my
analytics, and so I avoid it when programming at work.
I travel a lot and don't use Tor to create my
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 03:54:13PM -0400, Roger Dingledine wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 07:43:47PM +, anonymous coward wrote:
> > I think for certain things it does not make much sense to use Tor, for
> > example for online banking. When I connect to my bank I am not anonymous
> > anway. Wh
How do you folks use Tor? Do you use it permanently for all your network
connections or only from time to time for certain activities?
I think for certain things it does not make much sense to use Tor, for
example for online banking. When I connect to my bank I am not anonymous
anway. When I use e
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 07:43:47PM +, anonymous coward wrote:
> I think for certain things it does not make much sense to use Tor, for
> example for online banking. When I connect to my bank I am not anonymous
> anway. When I use ebay, I am not anonymous either, they have my adress,
> Paypal kn
Sukhbir Singh:
> If you did not change the port number, this is unexpected behavior,
> please file a bug.
Everything is fine with TorBirdy, it was me who put in manually starttls
and port 143, probably it was too late night... I changed now to SSL/993
and everything is fine.
Thankx
R
signat
Sukhbir Singh:
> anonymous coward:
>
> You should use port 993 (SSL/TLS) for all IMAP accounts if you want to
> connect to your mail server over Tor. That is why it is the default
> setting :)
>
>> Thunderbird try to circumvent Tor? Isn´t it just normal, TB tries
>> to connect to the imap server
Karsten N.:
> Latest Thunderbird versions enforce STARTTLS if it was selected. The
> weak option "Use STARTTLS if possible" is not available any more in
> Thunderbird. You may use IMAP with STARTTLS, if your provider does not
> offer IMAPS.
I changed to SSL/993 which should be fine now.
But, wit
On Wed, 3 Jul 2013 14:14:06 +0200
Lunar wrote:
>
> Tor Weekly News July 3rd,
> 2013
>
>
> Welcome to the ver
Tor 0.2.4.15-rc is the first release candidate for the Tor 0.2.4.x
series. It fixes a few smaller bugs, but generally appears stable.
Please test it and let us know whether it is!
https://www.torproject.org/dist/
(Next step is clearly to get more user-usable bundles available with
this version, s
> > > They said we must cross-compile any native code into Javascript. I am
> > > not sure if that was meant to be a joke or not.
> > >
> >
> >
> > They are probably talking about using emscripten :
> > https://github.com/kripken/emscripten/wiki
> >
>
>
>
> Yeah, I've seen people talk about
Le Wed, 3 Jul 2013 14:14:06 +0200,
Lunar a écrit :
>
> Tor Weekly News July 3rd,
> 2013
>
>
Wow, thanks for
Lunar:
> This issue of Tor Weekly News has been assembled by Lunar, dope457,
> moskvax, Mike Perry, Nick Mathewson, mttp, and luttigdev.
Thanks! This is most interesting, you certainly have me as a reader.
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On Tuesday 02 July 2013 21:01:34 anonymous coward wrote:
> How can I see what route my data use? Vidalia shows a map, but it is not
> that precise to my eyes. I read you can even chose what exit node to
> use? Where can I see what exit nodes are available? Can changes to the
> exit node be made on
Tor Weekly News July 3rd, 2013
Welcome to the very first issue of Tor Weekly News, the weekly
newsletter meant
On 03.07.2013 00:14, anonymous coward wrote:
> Oh, I just checked, I used STARTTLS, which actually is port 143.
If STARTTLS was enforced for IMAP (port 143) it is safe like SSL for
IMAPS (port 993).
But Tor does not know, if STARTTLS was enforced or only desired in your
Thunderbird configuration.
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On 02-Jul-13 11:39 PM, Nathan Freitas wrote:
> However, I think *someone* should start working on a lightweight
> Tor javascript client now, just to see whether or not it is
> possible, because I think it could have great impact.
Javascript should al
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