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Basic Anonimity With TOR



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Basic Anonimity With TOR

This article is how to hide your ip address, and how to prevent some one from getting it. It only deals with the basics of it. I will go further on it, in other articles in the future. You will need mozilla firefox in order to get anonymous, since it is very easy to install additional plugins wich help with this.

The become anonymous, we must first know which information we send out, when we request a website. The IP-Address and User-Agent are the most important headers that are included in a request.

We can hide the IP-Address by using a proxy. A proxy forwards the request and returns the data for you. Thus it’s IP will be seen by the server instead of yours. Maybe you think that this is great. Proxy servers can also be very unsafe, when run by an hacker or malicious system operator. The proxy can easily intercept, log or modify the requests you sent through it. Think about this when u are logging in your myspace account.

There is a more safe solution. The solution is called TOR. TOR is an anonymization project which sends your request through multiple safe proxies (you should google for it!). The request is encrypted and with each node it passes, one layer of encryption is removed. This will eliminate potential logger of your request and your IP will be hidden. A good solution is the Vidalia project, combined with TOR and privoxy. This will also help to combat DNS leaks. This happens when the request is proxified, but the hostname lookup isn’t, thus potentially revealing your ip address
Are we finaly anonymous. The answer is no! The browser also sends out an User-Agent header. This header contains the name of the browser, the version and an unique number. When u visit a website this header is logged. Due to the unique number, a system operator can simply compare the proxified request if it matches an unproxified request. If there is a match, he will have your IP. To combat this, you can use the firefox plugin ‘modify headers’ and filter out the User-Agent header.

This measures should be enough to keep you very safe, but there are more thing that you will have to remeber, but I shall discuss this in another article, since this is my first. I hope you enjoyed it and learned from it!

Comments

Zephyr_Pure on November 15 2007 - 19:53:51
Well, it's your first article, so I will be halfway decent. Matching a User-Agent header from a proxied and unproxied packet is... well, just not bloody likely. When covering basics, either go into great detail, or use the abbreviated basics as the prelude to a deeper discussion. Otherwise, your article might as well be a forum post. I hate to say this, but I could've summed up your article by saying "Torbutton and User Agent Switcher for Firefox... Done."
mr noob on November 15 2007 - 20:49:15
to be honest, most people should know this already. although it was reasonably well covered, so rated good :)
Dr4g0nsh0t on November 15 2007 - 20:58:31
Average, very short, all the info is on the TOR site. you could of added more info.
xtrmsk8r91 on November 17 2007 - 23:20:42
Keep in mind that if someone is listening on the final proxy (the one right before your data gets to the intended server) it is easily interceptilble. See this for more info.
mikispag on November 22 2007 - 17:02:42
Good!
Mr_Cheese on November 24 2007 - 00:33:20
Now i hate you even more you damn skiddie
undergrounddlz on December 01 2007 - 19:28:42
Since you useing Fire fox you can also spoof yourself to look like googles user agent, which is here bots. Type about:config in Firefox URL bar, and use this user agent. Googlebot/1.0 (googlebot@googlebot.com http://googlebot.com/) you can google this for more info.
shabouwcaw on December 16 2007 - 01:10:56
if you use firefox, there is a very handy extension that does all this automatically. tor-proxy.net toolbar is very handy. using it myself in school and it works like a dream
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