On Tue, Mar 06, 2007 at 11:57:31AM +0000, sy16 wrote: > I read in this blog > http://www.hermann-uwe.de/blog/howto-anonymous-communication-with-tor-some-hints-and-some-pitfalls >
To clarify for the or-talk readers, it looks like the suggestion for using Skype with Tor can be summarized as "use Freecap". > in the comment/reply section: > > Not meant for privacy It seems like there's a slight > misunderstanding here. This setup is not going to anyonymize all of your > Skype telephony traffic, but will only allow you to tunnel connections to the > Skype servers through TOR. As such, your peer-to-peer traffic will not be > anonymized, and even your telephony traffic to the skype servers may be > unencrypted. You just fake your IP address towards the skype authentication > server, that's all. > ---------------------- > I do not understand this paragraph. Doesn't "tunnel connections ... through > TOR" mean encrypting the traffic, whether voice or text? The problem is that Skype uses either UDP or TCP, depending on the situation. If it chooses TCP, Freecap will intercept it and send it through Tor, and for that traffic you'll get anonymity as well as encryption up to the point where it reaches the first Skype hop -- after that you have to rely on whatever encryption Skype gives you (and as Enigma pointed out, there are some cases where Skype gives you none). > If I send a text message in skype through tor, is it or is it not encrypted > by tor? Yes, if it goes through Tor, then it is encrypted by Tor, up to the point where it reaches the first Skype hop. After that, it's up to Skype to protect it. But if it doesn't go through Tor (for example, Skype choses to use UDP), then Tor isn't anywhere in the picture. > If I make a skype call through tor, is the voice traffic encrypted by tor? Same answer as above. > Finally, please tell me how to configure skype to use tor -- I have > confidence in tor's protective power :-) Step one would be to force Skype to use TCP only. I'm not sure how to do this; one option would be to firewall yourself so only the Tor process can send outbound traffic (don't ask me how to do that in Windows, it's probably really hard), and I hear Skype is smart enough to keep trying until it finds something that works. I should also note that Tor is going to make you a very sad Skype voice user, since it'll add both latency and jitter. But maybe Skype text is ok. (I personally don't use Skype, because I don't know what the heck it does. But for Windows users, I guess that's par for the course. YMMV.) Good luck, --Roger