Learn how setting up and running Tor bridges can help defend the open Internet in this great Tor Blog article: . We believe everyone should have private access to the open internet, but not everyone is able to enjoy the luxury Tor provides. Freedom to publish, share, and access information online is critical for a healthy society, yet governments and entities around the world deny people this universal human right. All of the relays that make up the Tor network are publicly listed, so that means one way to try to prevent people from using Tor is to blacklist the public IP addresses of all of the thousands of Tor relays. For example, the governments of China, Iran, and Kazakhstan exercise information control by trying to block Tor. However, thanks to bridges, Tor users are still able to connect to the network when the public Tor relays are blocked. Bridges are private Tor relays that serve as stepping stones into the network. Not only are bridges private, they can also modify their network packets in a way that it's difficult for an observer to conclude that somebody is using Tor. Censored users are able to select bridges from BridgeDB or directly in Tor Browser’s Network Settings. The link for this article located at Tor Blog is no longer available. . Learn how Tor bridges enhance internet access and protect user privacy against censorship.. Tor Bridges, Privacy Protection, Censorship Bypass, Internet Freedom. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A pact between the U.S. government and the electronic privacy company Anonymizer, Inc. is making the Internet a safer place for controversial websites and subversive opinions -- if you're Iranian. This month Anonymizer began providing Iranians with free access to . . . . A pact between the U.S. government and the electronic privacy company Anonymizer, Inc. is making the Internet a safer place for controversial websites and subversive opinions -- if you're Iranian. This month Anonymizer began providing Iranians with free access to a Web proxy service designed to circumvent their government's online censorship efforts. In May, government ministers issued a blacklist of 15,000 forbidden "immoral" websites that ISPs in the country must block -- reportedly a mix of adult sites and political news and information outlets. An estimated two million Iranians have Internet access. Among the banned sites are the website for the U.S.-funded Voice of America broadcast service, and the site for Radio Farda, another U.S. station that beams Iranian youth a mix of pop music and westernized news. Both stations are run by the International Broadcasting Bureau (IBB), the U.S. government's overseas news and propaganda arm. The U.S. responded to the filtering this month by paying Anonymizer (neither the IBB nor Anonymizer will disclose how much) to create and maintain a special version of the Anonymizer proxy which only accepts connections from Iran's IP address space, and features instructions in Farsi. The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . Partnership between a privacy tool and U.S. authorities boosts internet connectivity for Iranians in the face of restrictions.. Web Proxy, Internet Privacy, Anonymization Service. . Anthony Pell
Peek-A-Booty is designed to let surfers access sites blocked by government restrictions, and is essentially, a distributed proxy network. It uses a peer-to-peer model, masking the identity of each node. So the user can route around censorship that blocks citizens' access to specific IP addresses, because the censor doesn't know they're going there. . . .. Peek-A-Booty is designed to let surfers access sites blocked by government restrictions, and is essentially, a distributed proxy network. It uses a peer-to-peer model, masking the identity of each node. So the user can route around censorship that blocks citizens' access to specific IP addresses, because the censor doesn't know they're going there. Now you can see the user connected to three different machines: a "normal" peer, who's not behind a firewall; a user behind a NAT translation mangler, and a node which is behind a censor firewall. He's the duct-taped bear. Read related story at TheRegister for background on Peek-A-Booty. . Peek-A-Booty is designed to let surfers access sites blocked by government restrictions, and is esse. peek-a-booty, designed, surfers, sites, blocked, government, restrictions. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A group of hackers has alarmed law enforcement agencies with plans for a browser that could make it impossible to control the material people have access to on the world wide web. The US-based "ethical" hacking group, Cult of the Dead . . . . A group of hackers has alarmed law enforcement agencies with plans for a browser that could make it impossible to control the material people have access to on the world wide web. The US-based "ethical" hacking group, Cult of the Dead Cow, says the new technology will allow people living under oppressive regimes to circumvent censorship to access banned material. The browser, dubbed Peekabooty, will be launched in July amid mounting concern from human rights and civil liberties groups over attempts to restrict access to the internet. Peekabooty, which will use all the machines in the network to store data instead of using a central server, will be the internet equivalent of having information delivered in a discreet brown envelope. The link for this article located at The Guardian is no longer available. . A tech collective plans to unveil GhostSurf, an application designed to evade monitoring and champion online freedom.. Peekabooty Browser, Internet Freedom, Ethical Hacking, Digital Rights. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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