Tor (short for The onion router) is a system intended to enable online anonymity. Tor client software routes Internet traffic through a worldwide volunteer network of servers in order to conceal a user's location or usage from anyone conducting network surveillance or traffic analysis. Using Tor makes it more difficult to trace Internet activity, including "visits to Web sites, online posts, instant messages and other communication forms", back to the user and is intended to protect users' personal freedom, privacy, and ability to conduct confidential business by keeping their internet activities from being monitored.
download link: TOR
note
1) works with Firefox only (chrome will not even allow you to download it!!!)
2) firefox also provides a plugin for TOR.
note
1) works with Firefox only (chrome will not even allow you to download it!!!)
2) firefox also provides a plugin for TOR.
Tor aims to conceal its users' identities and their network activity from surveillance and traffic analysis by separating identification and routing. It is an implementation of onion routing, which encrypts and then randomly bounces communications through a network of relays run by volunteers throughout the globe. These onion routers employ encryption in a multi-layered manner (hence the onion metaphor) to ensure perfect forward secrecy between relays, thereby providing users with anonymity in network location. That anonymity extends to the hosting of censorship-resistant content via Tor's anonymous hidden service feature.
Because the internet address of the sender and the recipient are not both in cleartext at any hop along the way (and at middle relaysneither piece of information is in cleartext), someone eavesdropping at any point along the communication channel cannot directly identify both ends. Furthermore, to the recipient it appears that the last Tor node (exit relay) is the originator of the communication rather than the sender.
screenshots
thank you and do write back for us.
No comments:
Post a Comment