Tor Leaking
Simon Callow
simoncallow68 at yahoo.com
Wed Jun 14 18:42:14 UTC 2006
I'm not sure as I only had a quick look but all that
maths under janography lost me. I couldn't find
anything in the table of contents. I think the page
where I found it was just suggesting things to blog
about. Anyway I emailed them and asked for an
explanation.
Simon
--- Fabian Keil <freebsd-listen at fabiankeil.de> wrote:
> Simon Callow <simoncallow68 at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > I came across a privacy blog that says even when
> you
> > set up Tor correctly it still leaks sometimes. It
> says
> >
> >
> > And you Thought you were Safe!ÂYouÂve installed
> that
> > proxy chain. You've shooed away the two
> JaysÂthose
> > attractive, brightly coloured birds that prove
> just
> > that little bit too inquisitive for comfort.
> YouÂve
> > done everything correctlyÂby the book. So you
> call up
> > your favourite search engine, enter your favourite
> > topic, and soon youÂre clicking away on one link
> after
> > another, sure in the knowledge that Big Brother
> > doesnÂt know what sites youÂre visiting. Right?
> Â
> > Wrong! Some of those clicks will be putting a
> smile on
> > Big BrotherÂs face. And no need to feel so smug,
> all
> > you Tor usersÂyes, we mean you too!
> >
> > It's at www.nearlyperfectprivacy.blogspot.com.
> They
> > are not against Tor as theyÂre running a campaign
> > supporting it and they seem to know a lot about
> > privacy.
>
> Do you have additional links were they actually
> bring
> in some information about what "leaks" and
> "fingerprints"
> they are talking about?
>
> To me they don't look were knowledgeable at all,
> the blog doesn't even display correctly in my
> browser.
>
> Also taken from:
>
http://nearlyperfectprivacy.blogspot.com/2006/04/in-depth-just-over-horizon.html
>
> |Your Fingerprints, Please: Digital of
> Course!âItâs getting
> |very difficult to surf without leaving your
> fingerprints behind.
> |We campaign for a solution, and offer an interim
> one.
>
> Am I the only one who didn't find their interim
> solutions?
>
> |We could also get down and dirty (Tiffs is really
> good at
> |that sort of thing. Ouch! Why did the Good Lord
> have to give
> |women such powerful finger muscles? I bear the
> scars!): want
> |to know the difference between SOCKS4 and SOCKS4a?
> No! We
> |didnât think so. But weâll tell you in any
> case!
>
> I didn't see where/if they explain the difference,
> but if that's as "down and dirty" they get, the blog
> seems to be pretty worthless.
>
> > I had a look through the archives and the
> > Wiki and I can't find anything that would cause
> Tor to
> > just leak sometimes. If you've done it by the
> book
> > then that would be with Privoxy so I thought there
> > would be no DNS leakage. If you have turned off
> Java
> > and Javascript as they say they I thought you'd be
> > okay apart from the sort of attack where someone
> looks
> > at both ends of the line. They seem to be saying
> that
> > DNS leaks sometimes but not always. But if Tor
> wasn't
> > set up properly then it would leak all the time.
> Am I
> > missing something.
>
> I think you're missing that they are probably just
> spreading FUD to get attention and have either no
> real
> information to offer, or are very good at hiding it.
>
> Fabian
> --
> http://www.fabiankeil.de/
>
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
More information about the tor-talk
mailing list