No. If you are using tor (for example) at your office, the office firewall
can't see what you're doing, they just see encrypted data. However, if there
is a tap _on_ _your_ _computer_ they can see what you're doing.
Ringo Kamens
On 3/4/07, halesnil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Geoffrey Goodell wrote:
> A subtle but important clarification: the term "entry node" refers to
> the first node in a circuit. Your Tor client, which listens on
> localhost, is not an "entry node"; it is not one of the three Tor
> routers in the circuit. However, your Tor client does represent the
> endpoint of the circuit, and the connection between your client and the
> first node in the circuit is encrypted.
>
>
>
>
I meant like this:
My Computer-----------------*Local
Tap-*-------------------[first node]------ ------- -------Destination
I think you meant traffic going out from My Computer is encrypted, so
*Local Tap *can't read it. Right?
*
*Traffic coming back from Destination must pass through [first node],
*Local Tap*, before reaching My Computer. Please clarify, does *Local
Tap* see unencrpted traffic between [first node] and My Computer?