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defcon wrote:
(snip)
> Now the
> government has 90% of the worlds dns servers logged and isp's
> backbones building up browsing habits like they do at libraries.
> Every time you go to a public library everything you read is recorded
> and the fbi/ci
On Thu, 6 Mar 2008 13:50:56 -0700 defcon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
top-posted:
>Yes fortunately not all libraries log although if they are funded by
>state and federal governments they most likely allow these
>state/federal governments log into their systems, also many public
>libraries are not ver
Yes fortunately not all libraries log although if they are funded by
state and federal governments they most likely allow these
state/federal governments log into their systems, also many public
libraries are not very secure that I have been to and could easily be
backdoored on the library network
On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 1:15 PM, defcon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I completely agree, the purpose for tor is to keep your browsing
> private, I dont think using digg anywhere is a privacy concern unless
> you are digging illegal content that can be used against you. The
> only reason I use to
I completely agree, the purpose for tor is to keep your browsing
private, I dont think using digg anywhere is a privacy concern unless
you are digging illegal content that can be used against you. The
only reason I use tor is to bypass company firewalls and to anonymize
my browsing when I am surfi
Sebastian Hahn wrote:
>
> On Mar 6, 2008, at 5:25 PM, Dieter Zinke wrote:
>
>>> Enabling javascript may display the CAPTCHA, but
>>> exposes you to attacks
>>> and lowers your anonimity chances.
>>>
>>
>> Right. But be realistic, even if you are surfing the
>> CIA' s website or to top it the FBI (h
On Mar 6, 2008, at 5:25 PM, Dieter Zinke wrote:
Enabling javascript may display the CAPTCHA, but
exposes you to attacks
and lowers your anonimity chances.
Right. But be realistic, even if you are surfing the
CIA' s website or to top it the FBI (have more VEDA if
you know what that is), they
> Enabling javascript may display the CAPTCHA, but
> exposes you to attacks
> and lowers your anonimity chances.
>
Right. But be realistic, even if you are surfing the
CIA' s website or to top it the FBI (have more VEDA if
you know what that is), they wouldn' t sniff you. Why
should they? And if
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Jonathan Addington wrote:
(snip)
| Couple of other options, albeit less convenient
| 1. Go to a library/coffee place/bookstore whatever with WiFi and
| register for your account there without using tor.
(snip)
| P.S. Not to encourage it or anything
On Tue, Mar 4, 2008 at 10:03 AM, Noiano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> malcontent discontent wrote:
> > I followed all the instructions for installing tor on
> > Ubuntu. Now I can't register at digg.com. I tried
> > every option I could think of to make it work but no
> > go. Can anybody tell
malcontent discontent ha scritto:
I can't register at digg.com.
Most probably it's a javascript issue.
You probably use Firefox+Torbutton which by default disable javascript.
The digg registration page uses a CAPTCHA, but if the javascript that
triggers it is disabled, you can't complete the
malcontent discontent wrote:
> I followed all the instructions for installing tor on
> Ubuntu. Now I can't register at digg.com. I tried
> every option I could think of to make it work but no
> go. Can anybody tell me what to do so I can use tor
> and sign up for digg.com
As Ronger Dingledine s
On Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 8:10 PM, malcontent discontent
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I followed all the instructions for installing tor ...
> Now I can't register at digg.com.
you won't be able edit wikipedia articles via Tor either (probably),
and other sites may behave differently if they detect y
I followed all the instructions for installing tor on
Ubuntu. Now I can't register at digg.com. I tried
every option I could think of to make it work but no
go. Can anybody tell me what to do so I can use tor
and sign up for digg.com
_
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