On 2015-01-15 07:08, Nathan Freitas wrote:
iOS doesn't allow external background proxies in the way that Android
does.
They do if you develop it as a VPN solution. OpenVPN is one such example
of a VPN technology which is not supported by iOS natively, but can be
added via third party applica
To elaborate a bit more:
A well-behaved (from App Store's perspective) iOS application is
prevented from launching a subprocess or interacting with another
application -- so Onion Browser and some other apps hackishly get around
that limitation by linking and running Tor as part of the app.
Thing
On Thu, Jan 15, 2015, at 09:59 AM, Jeff Burdges wrote:
>
> On 15 Jan 2015, at 21:54, Nathan Freitas wrote:
>
> > On a related note, the latest ChatSecure on iOS includes Tor, as well,
> > for XMPP connections.
>
> I thought it needed an external Tor applicaiton, specifically the one by
> Mike m
On 15 Jan 2015, at 21:54, Nathan Freitas wrote:
> On a related note, the latest ChatSecure on iOS includes Tor, as well,
> for XMPP connections.
I thought it needed an external Tor applicaiton, specifically the one by Mike
mentioned?
Jeff
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>On Thu, Jan 15, 2015, at 09:18 AM, blo...@openmailbox.org wrote:
>Is this a valid app for using Tor on the iPhone?
>https://mike.tig.as/onionbrowser/
Leaving aside the issues of iOS and the Apple Store, non-verifiable
binaries, etc, it is definitely a valid project and app. If you trust
using an
Is this a valid app for using Tor on the iPhone?
https://mike.tig.as/onionbrowser/
Thanks!
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