• Darknet Alternatives For IM

    From warmfuzzy@700:100/37 to All on Fri Apr 14 16:36:47 2023
    Sometimes your level of security requirements are higher than just some web
    app to secure your messages. Sometimes it makes more sense to use one of the Darknet offerings. The trio of Darknet's include TOR (The Onion Router), I2P (The Invisible Internet Project), and Freenet (The Freenet Project). These offer real time text communications in a method that is exceptionally hard to crack. I2P even offers the capabilities to connect to underground IRC services, having a compartmentalized private space in the Darknet. If these IRC servers are never made public then you've got something that is truly amazing: a way to chat securely, in realtime, with anonymity if desired, and hopped up on some mad cryptography. This is the new world boys and girls. This is comms that let you confidently chat securely. All three of the trio allow for instant communications, however Tor and I2P do the best job as Freenet is used mostly for hosting websites and their flogs (free blogs) with free as in freedom. As Tor and I2P offer a crypto layer above the normal internet they can host any type of server platform, but with very high-end security and anonymity.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 2022/07/15 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: thE qUAntUm wOrmhOlE, rAmsgAtE, uK. bbs.erb.pw (700:100/37)
  • From The Godfather@700:100/55 to warmfuzzy on Sat Apr 15 19:53:37 2023
    Sometimes your level of security requirements are higher than just some web app to secure your messages. Sometimes it makes more sense to use
    one of the Darknet offerings. The trio of Darknet's include TOR (The Onion Router), I2P (The Invisible Internet Project), and Freenet (The Freenet Project). These offer real time text communications in a method

    This may be off topic a bit, maybe not. I have heard that the Restrict Act would make VPN illegal here in the states if the bill is passed. Even if it doesn't pass, I might give TOR a shot again. How "invisible" am I to my ISP or those monitoring everyday internet traffic, when using TOR without a VPN? And who wrote / writes / owns TOR?

    |15-|12t|04G
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    ... Press any key to continue or any other key to quit...

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 2023/03/14 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Underground (700:100/55)
  • From warmfuzzy@700:100/37 to The Godfather on Tue Apr 18 00:50:33 2023
    This may be off topic a bit, maybe not. I have heard that the Restrict Act would make VPN illegal here in the states if the bill is passed.
    Even if it doesn't pass, I might give TOR a shot again. How "invisible"
    am I to my ISP or those monitoring everyday internet traffic, when using TOR without a VPN? And who wrote / writes / owns TOR?
    -tG

    To your ISP you are fully invisible, however to dangerous actors like the NSA or GCHQ or CSE they would be able to figure out (with a lot of effort) that your activity may be questionable. Every IP address that is connected to TOR can be back-traced, however it is a bit more effort as to see what you are actually downloading. For example there is an archive of illegal material that takes about 4 gigs in size to download, and there is nothing much else that is that big, so it could be inferred to be the illegal package of materials. This is a far out example, for 99% of data transactions through the TOR network it can't be determined what you are doing, only that you are a part of TOR's network. TOR wiht a VPN is safer, however TOR alone is still good. If you can't afford a VPN then you can try TAILS (The Amnesiac Incognito Live System), which is a Linux distribution made entirely for secure communications. TOR was originally the idea of a teenage kid, the US government picked the idea up and funded the creation of TOR. Currently, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF.org) maintains the TOR Project. It is rumored that there are still some funding by DARPA or the Naval Research Labs of the US DOD (Department of Defense). The reason the American Government is funding TOR is because it is dual-purpose, alongside the freedom for journalism and free speech, is the capability of users to send intelligence reports to the American DOD with a TOR blanket that allows them to send intel reports anonymously back to their controllers State-side. TOR is also open-source so you can be sure its solid code, you are free to check out what's underneath the hood.

    Cheers!
    -warmfuzzy

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 2022/07/15 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: thE qUAntUm wOrmhOlE, rAmsgAtE, uK. bbs.erb.pw (700:100/37)