On 2/3/19, procmem wrote:
> Does anyone know of Mixmaster remailers that are hosted on v3 onions?
Search for and survey known remailers.
Maybe some will offer it as result.
> The ones we currently have listed in Whonix are:
> k54ids7luh523dbi.onion
down
> gbhpq7eihle4btsn.onion
up, and exist
Whonix dev here. Does anyone know of Mixmaster remailers that are hosted on v3
onions? v2
will be EOL at some point soon. The ones we currently have listed in Whonix are:
k54ids7luh523dbi.onion
gbhpq7eihle4btsn.onion
None of these have public pages that can inform users of upcoming
changes or de
On 2/4/19 2:04 PM, Robin Lee wrote:
Hi
There was a regression some time ago in Tor browser that it would no longer
remember that java scripts had been allowed for specific sites. Now every time
you start Tor browser it has forgotten all your previous settings. I thought it
was just some tempo
Hi
There was a regression some time ago in Tor browser that it would no longer
remember that java scripts had been allowed for specific sites. Now every time
you start Tor browser it has forgotten all your previous settings. I thought it
was just some temporary regression but now it has been a
The problem is that repressive regimes block PT bridges.
> Also, there are others methods by which to bypass censorship [1] that do not
> require access to the torproject.org website.
> [1] https://www.torproject.org/docs/bridges.html.en#PluggableTransports
Sent with ProtonMail Secure Email.
Could you give a bit of background and context to the post? It's not clear for
me what problem you're solving and how you're solving it. I mean, you outline
some software and configuration, but what are you doing?
Also, there are others methods by which to bypass censorship [1] that do not
requ
Just to play devil's advocate; I see you've listed the benefits, but to make
this a more rounded proposal, what about the drawbacks?
On 2 February 2019 16:10:42 GMT, Nathaniel Suchy wrote:
>Hi,
>
>This is an informal proposal to make Tor faster. Okay as follows:
>
>The Tor Network increasingly