Question and Confirmation.
Matthew
pumpkin at cotse.net
Fri Jan 28 23:29:25 UTC 2011
I just want to confirm one thing and ask something else.
My understanding is that Tor encrypts both the content of a data packet and
also the header. It encrypts the packet and header three times on the
client (my computer) and then at each node one layer is decrypted until the
data packet and header are decrypted to plaintext at the final exit node
(except when TLS is used). Right?
The Tor FAQ says "Tor is not illegal anywhere in the world". Can that
really be the case? What about North Korea for example? Tor as a specific
tool might not be specifically illegal but surely it would fall under the
rubric of some kind of stupid prohibition? Just wondering.
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