On Wed, Jan 20, 2016 at 2:08 PM, Roman Mamedov wrote:
> On Wed, 20 Jan 2016 20:57:57 +0200
> Lars Noodén wrote:
>
>> http://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/exhibits/1332.pdf
>> http://www.justice.gov/
> www.justice.gov.edgesuite.net is an alias for a1170.dscb.akamai.net.
> https://trac.torproject.o
hmm it's written in bash. that would not have been my first choice to
express this type of software.
why bash?
i like ansible's agent-less design (no SPOF server with ambient
authority) however it's restrictive yaml really lacks expressiveness
and writing ansible modules in addition to yaml seems
Coderman, most welcome.
To answer your question on port binding; that's a bit tricky, and depends on
what types of Tor nodes are chosen. Oh and the most up to date documentation
for variables and script arguments can be found in the [ ~/variables/
blank_torinstall_vars.sh ] file, I'll have to
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Oskar Wendel :
I already see some flaws in my solution, so forgive me for answering
myself.
> 2. HS owner creates the "revocation message" for the onion address, signs
> it with his key and submits it to the DHT the same way a HS descriptor
> is u
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Rejo Zenger :
> [2] OK. Not entirely true, maybe. It may be possible to include those
> key in some listing of the directory authorities marking them as bad
> nodes. This is a manual process.
There should be a possibility to automate this process. So
Hello everyone,
Shortly after sending an email to the maintainers of the site I revisited
the article and it seems there is now a comment field (that was not there
before).
Sorry for any confusion.
Thanks,
Kevin Gallagher
Graduate Student, Department of Computer Science
New York University Tand
Hello everyone,
I have found a recent article that attempts to unfairly depict Tor in a bad
light without mentioning many of the positives. I find it interesting that,
when mentioning alternatives for Tor, the only link provided is to a
"review" (what appears to be sponsored content) published on
On Wed, 20 Jan 2016 20:57:57 +0200
Lars Noodén wrote:
> I checked the FAQ and it is unclear about precisely what to do about
> sites that gratuitously block Tor. Just recently I noticed that
> www.justice.gov blocks Tor. For example the URL
>
> http://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/exhibits/1332.p
Hi Lars,
the is no strategy to go around the block.
Try using a new exit node.
~Josef
Am 20.01.2016 um 19:57 schrieb Lars Noodén:
> I checked the FAQ and it is unclear about precisely what to do about
> sites that gratuitously block Tor. Just recently I noticed that
> www.justice.gov blocks Tor
I checked the FAQ and it is unclear about precisely what to do about
sites that gratuitously block Tor. Just recently I noticed that
www.justice.gov blocks Tor. For example the URL
http://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/exhibits/1332.pdf
and the search function at the site's start.
http://www.just
On 1/19/16, Michael wrote:
> Salutations Tor,
>
> I've something special to share with you all; regardless of if you're a node
> operator, hidden service provider, client or completely new to Tor
> installation and configurations... in short... a script pack aimed to
> install and configure the pr
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