Nam Su: > > > 2012. 11. 8. AM 1:31 adrelanos <adrela...@riseup.net> wrote: > >> Nam Su: >>> Hello. I saw a blog post in Internet. It says the government >> >> Not only government. > Does ISP can track Tor users? > >> >>> can track Tor user with plugin like active-x and javascript. Is it true? >> >> Active-X / Flash: >> - Unless special setups are used, yes. It can establish direct >> connections and circumvent the proxy. > So, shouldn't I use active-x and flash? > >> >> Javascript: >> - Can not be directly used for deanonymization. Can be used for browser >> fingerprinting, linking all sessions to the same pseudonym and to >> collect loads of other data, see ip-check.info for example. >> - Risk for browser exploits and therefore leak the IP. > > Sorry. I have a poor English so I understand this JavaScript can't track my > ip but can track other information like timezone, macaddress, and windows > user name. I think there are some misunderstanding. Am I understand right?
I don't know about mac address and windows user name, but generally yes, lots of data. IP as far I know only though security exploits. >> >>> And what should I do not to be tracked? >> >> Use The Tor Browser Bundle and never stop learning. > > And I have one more question. Sometimes, I can't load Torcheck page *with > tor*. Maybe timeout, slow connection, general Tor connection problems. Check.tpo was never overload for me. > Can my government and my ISP can block torcheck page if I use Tor? Only Tor can be blocked. Once you manage to connect to Tor (ex: using (private) (obfuscated) bridges) you can visit torcheck. _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list tor-talk@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk