It doesn't seem right, but it is. It's just a configuration file.
It doesn't seem right, but it is. It's just a configuration file.
great, thats all set up, they now give completely different ip addresses. Thanks!
Code:Field Data Dependency External Address 85.25.151.22 Browser Internal Host unknown Java Internal Address unknown Java DNS Server (Java) unknown Java DNS Server (HTTP) unknown Browser DNS Server (Word) unknown Office DNS Server (iTunes) unknown iTunes DNS Server (Quicktime) unknown Quicktime External NAT (Java) unknown Java External NAT (Flash) 91.84.68.247 Flash External NAT (Word) unknown Office External NAT (iTunes) unknown iTunes External NAT (Quicktime) 85.25.151.22 Quicktime
oops, i forgot to do that. They are disabled now, and this is the info i get
None of the info given out is my actual ip addressCode:Field Data Dependency External Address 85.25.152.185 Browser Internal Host unknown Java Internal Address unknown Java DNS Server (Java) unknown Java DNS Server (HTTP) unknown Browser DNS Server (Word) unknown Office DNS Server (iTunes) unknown iTunes DNS Server (Quicktime) 85.25.255.10 Quicktime External NAT (Java) unknown Java External NAT (Flash) unknown Flash External NAT (Word) unknown Office External NAT (iTunes) unknown iTunes External NAT (Quicktime) 85.25.152.185
I'm still worried about that quicktime stuff showing up; while on my setup, I also get an External NAT with the same value as my exit node, I don't get the DNS server. But I suppose that doesn't really matter, as long as you stay safe.
While you're there, this site might be helpful:
http://a5ec6f6zcxtudtch.onion/
That's a Tor-only .onion site run by the German Privacy Foundation. It's accessible over Tor and I2P as a hidden site, meaning there's end-to-end encryption on it. It has submission services for the Mixmaster anonymous email network, so you can send email anonymously without having to install the Mixmaster software. Make sure the email is encrypted with PGP/GPG -- GPG is installed by default on Ubuntu, and you can set up an encryption key pair using Seahorse (Applications>Accessories>Passwords and Encryption Keys). Your recipient will also need to have a key pair, so set that up with them before leaving.
Good luck.
Thanks very much for your help. I will give encrypted email a try soon, that quicktime info dosen't matter does it?
tor is slow... what you could do is get a VPN access... either if you have a box at home you can start a vpn connection to it. Then the access of your computer to the computer at home is encrypted and you basically do the requests from home or you could rent a vpn account from a provider which does the same.
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