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Topic: Russia is offering big bucks to de-anonymize Tor (Read 766 times)

hero member
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Life is a taxable event

OMG no windows binaries?!?!
This coin is a scam, I can tell you that right now.
How big is your premine, bro?

You seem to be completely off topic.
newbie
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OMG no windows binaries?!?!
This coin is a scam, I can tell you that right now.
How big is your premine, bro?
hero member
Activity: 574
Merit: 500
Quote
It is very easy to identify people who use TOR, you only need to check with ISPs to see who is connecting to a gatekeeper.

Agreed, TOR is not the best tool for anonymity..
It is a great tool for anonymity. It will be obvious that you are using it, but it is difficult for an attacker to determine what you are doing on TOR
member
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It is very easy to identify people who use TOR, you only need to check with ISPs to see who is connecting to a gatekeeper.


I agree that this makes very little sense. I would hope that they would have been able to do this for some time now (maybe not hope but assume)
sr. member
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Two weeks ago the Russia Interior Ministry put out a call for a service that will allow Russian police officers to identify people who use the anonymity tool Tor to browse the Internet. And it’s promising 3.9 million rubles (equivalent to roughly $111,000) to whoever completes the job, reports RT.
..
The U.S. National Security Agency is also working to decrypt Tor, and so are others. Researchers from Carnegie Mellon were set to give a talk at the upcoming Black Hat Conference on how to de-anonymize Tor on a shoestring budget, though it was cancelled.


Imagine the people of north korea could communicate anonymously online, and say anything they want.. It would be revolutionairy.. but of course the NK government wouldn't allow it. The same for US and Russian government.

Quote
It is very easy to identify people who use TOR, you only need to check with ISPs to see who is connecting to a gatekeeper.

Agreed, TOR is not the best tool for anonymity..
legendary
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sr. member
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This is ultimately the Real World War III, who controls information. Viva the BlockChain, Viva!
newbie
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It is very easy to identify people who use TOR, you only need to check with ISPs to see who is connecting to a gatekeeper.

legendary
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Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon


Two weeks ago the Russia Interior Ministry put out a call for a service that will allow Russian police officers to identify people who use the anonymity tool Tor to browse the Internet. And it’s promising 3.9 million rubles (equivalent to roughly $111,000) to whoever completes the job, reports RT.

The Russian government has long followed Tor, a private-communications project born out of U.S. Naval Research labs that is now independently run. In fact, at one point Russia’s head of Federal Security Services toyed with the idea of banning the site altogether but later scrapped the idea. Now Russia’s Interior Ministry want to be able to identify people who use Tor to browse the Internet.

Tor uses encryption to obstruct access to location and other identifiers, allowing people to surf the Internet without being tracked. Users can also view government blocked sites, publish websites, and chat anonymously. Tor is used by journalists, activists, and of course people conducting illegal activities. In Russia it’s been an especially useful tool against censorship.

Only a small number of people in Russia use Tor, according to RT. But that number is growing. Since May the number of Tor users has more than doubled to 200,000, says RT, citing Apparat.cc online magazine.

The call to decrypt Tor follows on the heels of recent legislation in Russia that will force popular bloggers to register their sites. Bloggers will not be able to write about anything considered to be a “state-secret” or to promote illegal activities. However, bloggers who use Tor are supposed to be able to maintain their anonymity, a lawyer from Russia’s Pirate Party told the BBC.

The U.S. National Security Agency is also working to decrypt Tor, and so are others. Researchers from Carnegie Mellon were set to give a talk at the upcoming Black Hat Conference on how to de-anonymize Tor on a shoestring budget, though it was cancelled.

The Ministry says it will reveal the winner of its de-anonymize Tor bid on August 20.

http://venturebeat.com/2014/07/25/russia-is-offering-big-bucks-to-de-anonymize-tor/




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