>> > "Tor", and not "TOR".
>>
>> Is this list for capital punishment?
>> Or is this a community for freedom?
>
> This is a list for empowering each other and building a community and
> technology for helping those who are in need around the world. Please
> refer to our social contract [0], if there
On Tue, Jul 24, 2018 at 04:29:07PM +0100, Iain Learmonth wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 24/07/18 15:58, lesion wrote:
> > if you think the project's name is a real issue, suggestions are welcome :)
>
> orjail or onionjail perhaps.
> The name *is* an issue as you are infringing upon a trademark without
> p
Hi,
On 25/07/18 12:50, hi...@safe-mail.net wrote:
> 3. Start Tor, and you may experience v3 services not working for a
>longer period of time, but v2 services come right back up with no problems.
This is due to the revision counter which is stored in the state file.
See: https://trac.torpro
I'm not sure how to report bugs, so I'm doing it here.
This is how I can reproduce the bug on my system:
1. Onion services v2 and v3 works fine.
2. Stop tor process, and delete all files in /var/lib/tor (data dir)
Or just remove 'state'
3. Start Tor, and you may experience v3 services not wo
On 07/25/2018 01:26 AM, Roman Mamedov wrote:
> On Wed, 25 Jul 2018 01:14:12 -0700
> Mirimir wrote:
>
>> True. But I'd rather use the Whonix approach. It's doable using two VPS.
>> That is, if the provider will cooperate. One VPS runs the web server,
>> and it has no Internet connectivity or publi
On Wed, 25 Jul 2018 01:14:12 -0700
Mirimir wrote:
> True. But I'd rather use the Whonix approach. It's doable using two VPS.
> That is, if the provider will cooperate. One VPS runs the web server,
> and it has no Internet connectivity or public IP, just a private IP on a
> local network. The othe
On 07/24/2018 07:58 AM, lesion wrote:
> the whole point of torjail is to force all traffic via a virtual network
> interface that's routed into tor's sock5 (tor is started by torjail
> itself).
>
> an use case could be an hidden service:
> let's say you're running a website as an hidden service