Author

Topic: Russian Interior Ministry offers $111k to crack TOR network (Read 826 times)

hero member
Activity: 742
Merit: 500
They want to attack US Navy? It's not about cryptos.

Russians want to crack it? I thought it's already cracked?

Firefox was cracked. http://www.darkreading.com/risk-management/tor-anonymity-cracked-fbi-porn-investigation-role-questioned/d/d-id/1111037?

It's not the same thing.

Your windows box is cracked, BTW.
sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 250
Is it alt. coin?  Undecided

As you know the topic is related to alt.coins Tor. anon. technology.

I don't know which subforum is the best for posting this type of news here.

full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
A talk titled 'You don’t have to be the NSA to Break Tor: De-Anonymizing Users on a Budget,' which was to be presented at the reputable Black Hat hacker conference in August, was pulled without explanation earlier this week.

This guy was obviously paid off by the government to buy the tor breaking technique and not go public with it  Tongue

edit: All geeks know the easiest way to break tor is to make lots of your own tor nodes to monitor traffic.
hero member
Activity: 742
Merit: 500
I'm dying.
They want to attack US Navy? It's not about cryptos.

Russians want to crack it? I thought it's already cracked?
sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 250


Russia’s Interior Ministry is offering $111k for a technological solution that would allow police officers to identify internet surfers who are using the TOR anonymizer network, which has been rapidly growing in popularity inside the country.

The 3.9 million ruble (US$111,290) tender – whose winner will be announced on August 20 – was put on the official government procurement website and went unnoticed by the wider public for two weeks, until it was flagged by several human rights activists on Thursday.

TOR – which anonymizes the identity of an online user by encrypting their data and sending their information through thousands of random pathways, making it harder to trace – can be used to conceal potentially illegal activity. But it can also be essential for avoiding monitoring or censorship from security services, in countries with restrictive legislation.

“Law enforcers are worried about the ability of internet users to anonymously visit the internet, and particularly blocked sites. Also, the new blogging law that comes into force in August says that all bloggers with a daily audience of over 3,000 must register their identity. But someone blogging through TOR can do so anonymously,” Sarkis Darbinyan, a lawyer for Russia’s Pirate Party, told BBC.

While only a fraction of Russia’s 30 million households with internet access use an anonymizer, the number of TOR users has spiked from just 80,000 in May to nearly 200,000 this month, according to Apparat.cc online magazine – though it is unclear whether those results are muddied by automated accounts.

Nonetheless, Russia’s security service mooted a plan to ban all anonymizers last year, though the idea was later shelved.

Various technological solutions for unmasking TOR users have been applied by the NSA and other leading agencies, though most involve considerable time and expense, or rely on cracking less secure software used in conjunction with the anonymizer.

A talk titled 'You don’t have to be the NSA to Break Tor: De-Anonymizing Users on a Budget,' which was to be presented at the reputable Black Hat hacker conference in August, was pulled without explanation earlier this week.



Source: http://rt.com/news/175408-russia-internet-tor-service/


Jump to: