Nathan Suchy: > Would my traffic still be secure? > > Sent from my Android so do not expect a fast, long, or perfect response... >
The answer is the same as when you asked 'how private is Tor' - what does 'secure' mean? The attacker would be able to identify your location and destination in all circumstances. If you were browsing over https, they would have no more access to the content of your traffic than if you were connecting directly to the secure website (unless they separately found a way around that as well). If you were not using https, the content of your transactions would be readable and modifiable by the attacker (as it normally is by any exit node operator in that situation). So if you were browsing over https (and heeded any certificate warnings), and you were concerned only about the content of your communications, then being attacked by all three nodes would not change your level of security. If your definition of security includes not having your machine associated with a list of destinations on the internet by an observer then in this case, even with https, your traffic would no longer be secure. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong. -- tor-talk mailing list - tor-talk@lists.torproject.org To unsusbscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk