[tor-commits] r26693: {website} Some updates to the PT page. (website/trunk/docs/en)
George Kadianakis
asn at torproject.org
Sun Apr 6 01:20:21 UTC 2014
Author: asn
Date: 2014-04-06 01:20:21 +0000 (Sun, 06 Apr 2014)
New Revision: 26693
Modified:
website/trunk/docs/en/pluggable-transports.wml
Log:
Some updates to the PT page.
Modified: website/trunk/docs/en/pluggable-transports.wml
===================================================================
--- website/trunk/docs/en/pluggable-transports.wml 2014-04-05 08:08:20 UTC (rev 26692)
+++ website/trunk/docs/en/pluggable-transports.wml 2014-04-06 01:20:21 UTC (rev 26693)
@@ -44,32 +44,44 @@
and
<a href="https://gitweb.torproject.org/pluggable-transports/obfsproxy.git/blob/HEAD:/doc/obfs3/obfs3-protocol-spec.txt">obfs3</a>
pluggable transports. Maintained by asn. <br>
-
- Status: <a href="<page projects/obfsproxy>#download">Deployed</a>
+ Status: <a href="#download">Deployed</a>
</li>
- <li><b>Flashproxy</b> turns ordinary web browsers into bridges using
+ <li><a href="https://crypto.stanford.edu/flashproxy/"><b>Flashproxy</b></a> turns ordinary web browsers into bridges using
websockets, and has a little python stub to hook Tor clients to the
websocket connection. See its
- <a href="https://crypto.stanford.edu/flashproxy/">web page</a>,
<a href="https://gitweb.torproject.org/flashproxy.git">git repository</a>,
and
<a href="https://crypto.stanford.edu/flashproxy/flashproxy.pdf">design paper</a>.
Maintained by David Fifield.
# <iframe src="//crypto.stanford.edu/flashproxy/embed.html" width="80" height="15" frameborder="0" scrolling="no"></iframe>
<br>
- Status: <a href="https://crypto.stanford.edu/flashproxy/#how-to">Deployed</a>
+ Status: <a href="#download">Deployed</a>
</li>
- <li><b>ScrambleSuit</b> is a pluggable transport that protects
+ <li><a href="https://fteproxy.org/"><b>Format-Transforming
+ Encryption</b></a> (FTE) transforms Tor traffic to arbitrary
+ formats using their language descriptions. See the <a
+ href="https://kpdyer.com/publications/ccs2013-fte.pdf">research
+ paper</a>. <br> Status: <a href="#download">Deployed</a> </li>
+
+ <li><a href="http://www.cs.kau.se/philwint/scramblesuit/"><b>ScrambleSuit</b></a>
+ is a pluggable transport that protects
against follow-up probing attacks and is also capable of changing
its network fingerprint (packet length distribution,
- inter-arrival times, etc.). It's part of the Obfsproxy framework. See its
- <a href="http://www.cs.kau.se/philwint/scramblesuit/">official page</a>.
+ inter-arrival times, etc.). It's part of the Obfsproxy framework.
Maintained by Philipp Winter. <br>
- Status: <em>In testing</em>
+ Status: <em>To be deployed</em>
</li>
+ <li><b>Meek</b> is a transport that uses HTTP for carrying bytes
+ and TLS for obfuscation. Traffic is relayed through a third-party
+ server (Google App Engine). It uses a trick to talk to the third
+ party so that it looks like it is talking to an unblocked server.
+ Maintained by David Fifield. <br>
+ Status: <e>Coming soon</em>
+ </li>
+
<li><b>StegoTorus</b> is an Obfsproxy fork that extends it to a)
split Tor streams across multiple connections to avoid packet size
signatures, and b) embed the traffic flows in traces that look like
@@ -95,13 +107,6 @@
Status: <em>Undeployed</em>
</li>
- <li><b>Format-Transforming Encryption</b> (FTE) transforms Tor traffic
- to arbitrary formats using their language descriptions. See
- the <a href="https://kpdyer.com/publications/ccs2013-fte.pdf">research
- paper</a> and <a href="https://fteproxy.org/">web page</a>. <br>
- Status: <em>In testing</em>
- </li>
-
</ul>
<p> Also see the <emph>unofficial</emph> pluggable transports <a
More information about the tor-commits
mailing list