[tor-bugs] #8125 [TorBirdy]: add alternative to mail providers
Tor Bug Tracker & Wiki
blackhole at torproject.org
Fri Feb 1 02:22:38 UTC 2013
#8125: add alternative to mail providers
-------------------------+--------------------------------------------------
Reporter: proper | Owner: ioerror
Type: enhancement | Status: new
Priority: normal | Milestone:
Component: TorBirdy | Version:
Keywords: | Parent:
Points: | Actualpoints:
-------------------------+--------------------------------------------------
I am proposing to add a feature to use the mixmaster network to send mails
without need for registration. User clicks a send anonymous mail button,
can enter recipient, sender, subject and text and press send.
Please refer to mixmaster as a tool to send mails and discard the
anonymity aspects. [1] [2] Needless to say, I suggest using mixmaster over
Tor.
Although the network is quite old and small, the remaining node operators
are active on the remops list and not looking like they are about to shut
down the network. There are even some new developments on github
(mixfaster).
I've been experimenting with the mixmaster remailer network. It works
reliable. Sending a mail takes approximately 5 to 30 minutes, when using a
one hop mixmaster node.
Anonymity would be provided by Tor and mixmaster would gladly deliver
mail. I think this is quite interesting, since it doesn't require mail
providers or registration.
Mixmaster supports also posting messages to Usenet Newsgroups.
Users who wish this, could alternatively receive their messages in
alt.anonymous.messages (or another group of their choice), which is also
less dependent on a single e-mail address. It's like a big shared inbox,
where no troll can delete other peoples messages or change their account
password.
This has the advantage, that no single mail provider can log when someone
pseudonym checked an account. This is because users can fetch the whole
newsgroup instead of single messages so no servers know which message was
belongs to whom. Doing it right, no observer can find out who communicates
with whom and when.
,,
[1] In theory, remailers or to be more concrete, high latency networks are
more secure than low latency networks like Tor. The anonymity provided by
the remailer would add up to the anonymity provided by Tor. Given the
facts, the there is almost no activity activity (press, blog posts, forum,
mailing list discussion, development ceased) it's easy to assume that
remailers have very few remaining servers and users and add not much
anonymity in practice.
[2] Recommend reading: http://www.mail-
archive.com/liberationtech at lists.stanford.edu/msg00022.html
--
Ticket URL: <https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/8125>
Tor Bug Tracker & Wiki <https://trac.torproject.org/>
The Tor Project: anonymity online
More information about the tor-bugs
mailing list