On 11/24/2013 8:54 PM, Yo Mamma wrote:
Hi Joe,
I'll clarify the auto-login: After sign up it logged me in with the
credentials I had just created. Why would it use cookies from a previous,
different account login, to log in to this new account? Wouldn't that be a
security hole?
Dunno. Haven't
Hi Joe,
I'll clarify the auto-login: After sign up it logged me in with the
credentials I had just created. Why would it use cookies from a previous,
different account login, to log in to this new account? Wouldn't that be a
security hole?
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T
Lunar,
If you have it laying around, I'm interested. Would you mind
uploading it to GitHub or emailing it to me so I can upload it to
GitHub (credits to you of course.) so we can work on it some more.
Would rather use anything other than Windows.
I'm going to experiment with the Windows though,
Ed Fletcher:
> This is something that I have also wondered about. Why go outside of
> the Tor network to check that you're using Tor? Access to any hidden
> service would be proof positive that you are connected.
Because most people care about the clearnet. Because tor services are
not accessibl
I jumped so fast onto NoScript and other tools that I completely ignored
the options that are already there, somewhere. Sure, NoScript has some
wonderful extra features beyond JS blocking. It even has the
functionality of RequestPolicy and a lot more, but in a very unfriendly way.
How about Page I
hi, conrad. awhile ago, you'd mentioned you were working on a hidden
service e-mail system. i was wondering if you had made any progress on it.
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t...@lists.grepular.com:
> > >> 1) Create a list of tor exit nodes that do not block port 25
> > >> 2) Command the tor daemon to exit those nodes exclusively.
> > >SSL-SMTP configured to works over 465 port in most cases.
> > On Windows Yes.
> > SMTP over ssl/tls is configured on port 25. Start