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Tor Named One of the Year's Best Products

Iorek writes "PC World lauds Tor, an anonymous Internet communication system, as better than its paid competitors, and one of the best 100 products of 2005. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is supporting Tor development, has a press release as well."

10 of 160 comments (clear)

  1. Such hypocrisy. by King_of_Prussia · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How does slashdot get away with publicly lauding Tor as the great application that it is, while simultaneously blocking over 90% of the nodes from posting to slashdot? Try it now, it took me thirty tries to post a comment to slashdot using Tor the other day.

    --

    Making the moon less necessary since 1998.

    1. Re:Such hypocrisy. by stormcoder · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I've complained repeatedly about this and I haven't gotten a response.

      --
      Sorry my bullshit sensor overloaded.
  2. Publicity a good thing or not? by Critical_ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have been a Tor users for a very long time and, to a certain extent, the fact that it is not very well publicized has kept the system relatively free of the possibilty abuse. When I say possibility of abuse, I am talking about the media saying that Tor is a way to do anonymous torrents of copyrighted material, transferring child porn, etc. As Tor becomes more publicized, will I have to deal with articles from self-proclaimed experts accusing Tor of being a vehicle for such activity? Will I then see some politician try to pass legislation against anonymizer type software? Maybe I'm being alarmist, but these days anything is possible.

  3. Re:Hmm by kingofalaska · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Scroll down, read the articles about the so-called "Patriot Act", or censorship, or...

    There are many reasons. Yes, it can be abused, just as a stick or a rock can be abused.

    KOA

    Giant Missile Defense Radar Sails

  4. Re:Hmm by stevey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't get why so many people put letters in envelopes, what have they got to hide?

    Why not write on the back of postcards so everybody can make sure they're not hiding illegal words..

    It's a slippery slope. Encryption is useful.

  5. Re:Hmm by Dr+Damage+I · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The fact that one does not wish the state or ones ISP to know ones secrets does not imply that those secrets are illicit in nature. A person could be transmitting commercially sensitive material which if released could be used by ones competitors, or one could simply be averse to having people know that one uses ordinary, legal porn.

    It's a simple fact that People like privacy and place a non zero value on it. The phrase "what are you trying to hide" is the last refuge of the voyeur.

    --
    "Cursed is he who rises early in the morning..." Isiah 5:11
  6. Onion routers are by no means new but Tor is by Gopal.V · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Tor uses something called Onion Routing. But interestingly the original system was heavily patented and Tor had to work around all of those with something called "Telescopic Circuits". The problem (as far as my feeble brain understands) is that this is suitable for connection oriented data, but not for routing each packet a different way - seriously I'd love to run Tor as tun0 so that my IP packets head a different way and do point-to-point, but that seems to be a distant dream. Right now it seems to be just protocol proxying.

    And the problem with onion routing is that it is neither high-bandwidth or low-latency - just anonymous. Sharing files over Tor is a blatant misuse - but tracker comm over it is perfectly valid (Azureus already has a plugin - though I like dht better).

    Interestingly, I2P calls them Garlic routers (the pun is not lost on some of us).
  7. Re:Hmm by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The thing I don't get with Tor is why someone would need that much encryption, unless they were transferring something illegal like copyrighted material.
    In some places, discussing things like "democracy" and "freedom" is illegal. In some places, it's verboten for women to bare their necks or ankles (much less anything else) in public. In some places, it's illegal to read books that involve sexual behavior, or criticize the government, or any number of other things.

    Are you still convinced that a network of potential "illegal" uses is such a bad thing?
    --
    "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
  8. Tor like to thank the Academy by jalefkowit · · Score: 5, Funny

    Tor very happy to win award. Make Tor happy. Tor not smash now.

  9. Re:How about... by caluml · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Slashdot either eliminate "Anonymous Coward" posting

    No - it should leave the ability to post anonymously, but only if you are logged in to an actual account.