NSA vs Tor
Posted: Mon Mar 25, 2013 10:11 am
This is your daily reminder that:
- The NSA is logging all Tor traffic.
- The encryption algorithms used by Tor will be broken in less than two decades.
- All saved Tor traffic will be decrypted and analyzed then.
You can hide… for now.
--- from 4chan.... What do u think?
Related post:
If Tor traffic isn't easily distinguishable, then how have Iran/China been able to block it? Most US users don't even use bridges, which makes it a trivial matter of referencing the receiving IPs against the publicly available index of node IPs. It's not possible to perfectly replicate plain old SSL traffic, and the Tor Project admits this.
US is building a data center in Utah with data storage on the order of yottabytes, and are planning to use it to log all Internet traffic (plus cell phone calls, receipts, and other things) in the US. 100 petabytes over fifteen years is pleb-tier for them. They'll probably store more than that in a month. Get with the times, grandpa.
>Secondly, ISPs can't be compelled under US law to give over user information without a warrant…not even to the NSA.
>without a warrant
>warrant
>NSA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSA_warra ... ontroversy
Let me guess: you think the US is a democracy where the rule of law prevails?
- The NSA is logging all Tor traffic.
- The encryption algorithms used by Tor will be broken in less than two decades.
- All saved Tor traffic will be decrypted and analyzed then.
You can hide… for now.
--- from 4chan.... What do u think?
Related post:
If Tor traffic isn't easily distinguishable, then how have Iran/China been able to block it? Most US users don't even use bridges, which makes it a trivial matter of referencing the receiving IPs against the publicly available index of node IPs. It's not possible to perfectly replicate plain old SSL traffic, and the Tor Project admits this.
US is building a data center in Utah with data storage on the order of yottabytes, and are planning to use it to log all Internet traffic (plus cell phone calls, receipts, and other things) in the US. 100 petabytes over fifteen years is pleb-tier for them. They'll probably store more than that in a month. Get with the times, grandpa.
>Secondly, ISPs can't be compelled under US law to give over user information without a warrant…not even to the NSA.
>without a warrant
>warrant
>NSA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSA_warra ... ontroversy
Let me guess: you think the US is a democracy where the rule of law prevails?