You may never think about it, but many of your online activities may be monitored and analyzed. Advertising companies, government agencies, and private users can use traffic analysis to gather information about which Web sites and pages you visit, what newsgroups you read, and whom you talk to on IRC. While there is no need to be paranoid (or is there???), you can keep your online communication private. The Tor project can help you with that. . Traffic analysis is based on the fact that every packet of data sent from your computer includes a header containing information about source, destination, size, timing, and other items. If you take a look at a packet header you can at the very least see who sent the the data packet. That's what traffic analysis in its simplest form is about: intercepting data packets and looking at their headers. Tor tries to keep your packets private by distributing your transactions over several places on the Internet, so there is no direct connection to your destination. As Tor's Web site puts it: "The idea is similar to using a twisty, hard-to-follow route in order to throw off somebody who is tailing you -- and then periodically erasing your footprints." The link for this article located at NewsForge is no longer available. . Safeguard your digital conversations with Tor to defend against surveillance and data scrutiny.. Tor Privacy, Online Security, Data Protection, Anonymity Tools, Traffic Encryption. . Brittany Day
IPSec, supposedly the next great thing that will fix most (if not all) our network security problems. No longer will attackers be able to sniff network traffic, hijack connections or spoof servers. Hijacking domain names will be impossible with DNSSEC, and . . . . IPSec, supposedly the next great thing that will fix most (if not all) our network security problems. No longer will attackers be able to sniff network traffic, hijack connections or spoof servers. Hijacking domain names will be impossible with DNSSEC, and redirecting people to fake Websites will be a thing of the past. Or will it? There are currently a lot of problems and shortcomings with IPSec that prevent the majority of network traffic from being encrypted. The link for this article located at Security Portal is no longer available. . Explore the capabilities of IPSec in strengthening network defenses and examine its existing drawbacks.. IPSec, Network Security, Traffic Encryption, Security Challenges. . Anthony Pell
Enter SSH (Secure SHell). By using SSH, you encrypt the traffic and you can make 'man-in-the-middle' attacks almost impossible. It also protects you from DNS and IP spoofing. As a bonus, it offers the possibility to compress the traffic and thus . . . . Enter SSH (Secure SHell). By using SSH, you encrypt the traffic and you can make 'man-in-the-middle' attacks almost impossible. It also protects you from DNS and IP spoofing. As a bonus, it offers the possibility to compress the traffic and thus make transfers faster. SSH is a very versatile tool: not only does it replace telnet, you can also 'tunnel' services like ftp, pop and even ppp via it. The link for this article located at MandrakeUser is no longer available. . Enter SSH (Secure SHell). By using SSH, you encrypt the traffic and you can make 'man-in-the-middle'. enter, (secure, shell), using, encrypt, traffic, 'man-in-the-middle'. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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