On 11/01/2013 06:16 PM, DeveloperChris wrote:
>
> I just reviewed the tor hidden services page. so I am pretty green about
> the way it works.
>
>
> From the description I gather this
>
> When a client wants to connect to a hidden service an introducer picks a
> random rendezvious point which t
I just reviewed the tor hidden services page. so I am pretty green about the
way it works.
From the description I gather this
When a client wants to connect to a hidden service an introducer picks a
random rendezvious point which then is used to shuttle packets back and
forth between the c
Weeks ago I reported problems accessing https Ixquick / Startpage search
sites in TBB 2.3.25-12, then *-13 and 2.4.x; then saw it was most (or
all) sites using port 443.
Traced it to some issue with Kaspersky Internet Security 2014 (KIS) &
its "scan encrypted connections" feature, though never f
On 11/01/2013 02:30 AM, intrigeri wrote:
> FTR: you can boot from DVD and use persistence on a USB stick.
> It's not documented nor formally supported, but I'm told it
> works fine.
Really? I need to try this. I'd prefer to boot from a DVD and use an
internal hard drive or sdcard or something for
... you need: Tor and a intercepting Proxy (e.g. Privoxy) up-n-running.
1. *Declare a HiddenService pointing to Privoxy*
Edit torrc (/etc/tor/torrc) and add the following lines:
HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/my_magic/
HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:8118
Get the onion-link from
On 01.11.2013 12:08, Mix+TB Test wrote:
Running TB 24.1.0 with TorBirdy 0.1.1 under Linux. No issues. Default
settings, no other extensions.
It's on Windows that things happen like that. And it's strange as the
Network clearly shows the good settings.
--
tor-talk mailing list - tor-talk@lists
On 01.11.2013 03:38, Sukhbir Singh wrote:
Till that time, your best bet is to use Thunderbird 17. In fact, it
would be great if you can try it with TB 17 just to confirm that the
issue doesn't lie elsewhere.
Thank you Sukhbir! You nailed it the first time. Thunderbird 17.0.10
does not generate
Sukhbir Singh:
> antispa...@sent.at:
>
>> I downloaded TorBirdy 0.1.1. Than I installed clean Thunderbird from
>> PortableApps.com. Made sure nothing is called or installed before
>> TorBirdy. Than I have set up my account. A few of them actually. Than I
>> installed some extra extensions. TorBird
On 01.11.2013 03:38, Sukhbir Singh wrote:
Which version of Thunderbird are you using? If it is Thunderbird 24,
TorBirdy 0.1.1. is not compatible with it. We will be releasing a new
version in the coming week that adds support for Thunderbird 24.
It's even 24.1.0! And it makes perfect sense. But
Il 11/1/13 12:36 PM, Bry8 Star ha scritto:
>
> TAILS should release a VirtualBox VM based edition.
The use of Tails with a Virtual Machine would break the SecureDrop
threat model, so virtualization cannot be used in that context.
--
Fabio Pietrosanti (naif)
HERMES - Center for Transparency and D
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Oracle Virtualbox (GPL, free) and VMware Fusion (Proprietary,
not-Free), VMware Player (Proprietary, free), etc all works on
MacOSX (or OSX86). Oracle VirtualBox and VMware WorkStation and
VMware Player, etc all works on Linux, Windows, etc Host OS.
Micah Lee wrote (31 Oct 2013 22:24:13 GMT) :
> With SecureDrop, the viewing station requires Tails with persistent
> storage, and you can only use persistent storage if you boot off of a
> USB stick.
FTR: you can boot from DVD and use persistence on a USB stick.
It's not documented nor formally su
Whats up with this dickhead?
On 01/11/2013 4:03 AM, antispa...@sent.at wrote:
On 31.10.2013 07:29, DeveloperChris wrote:
Project Gutenberg wouldn't block proxies without good reason. The
trouble is without knowing the reason its hard to find a fix.
One possible reason hinted in the message
13 matches
Mail list logo