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@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ track and sell your behavior), and similarly from your local ISP.
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of its citizens visiting certain websites, they may monitor the sites
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and put readers on a list of suspicious persons.
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<li>Circumvention of local censorship: connect to resources (news
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-sites, instant messaging, etc) that are restricted from your
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+sites, instant messaging, etc.) that are restricted from your
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ISP/school/company/government.
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<li>Socially sensitive communication: chat rooms and web forums for
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rape and abuse survivors, or people with illnesses.
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@@ -238,7 +238,7 @@ href="http://wiki.noreply.org/wiki/TheOnionRouter/TorFAQ">the FAQ</a>.
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<p>To Torify an application that supports http, just point it at Privoxy
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(that is, localhost port 8118). To use SOCKS directly (for example, for
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-instant messaging, Jabber, IRC, etc), point your application directly at
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+instant messaging, Jabber, IRC, etc.), point your application directly at
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Tor (localhost port 9050). For applications that support neither SOCKS
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nor http, you should look at
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using <a href="http://tsocks.sourceforge.net/">tsocks</a>
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@@ -387,7 +387,7 @@ otherwise it is listed only by its fingerprint.</p>
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<h2>Configuring a hidden service</h2>
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<p>Tor allows clients and servers to offer hidden services. That is,
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-you can offer a web server, sshd, etc, without revealing your IP to its
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+you can offer a web server, SSH server, etc., without revealing your IP to its
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users. You can even have your application listen on localhost only, yet
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remote Tor connections can access it. This works via Tor's rendezvous
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point design: both sides build a Tor circuit out, and they meet in
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@@ -406,7 +406,7 @@ assuming they're using a proxy (such as Privoxy) that speaks SOCKS 4A.</p>
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<p>Let's consider an example.
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Assume you want to set up a hidden service to allow people to access your
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-Apache http server through Tor. By doing this, they can access your server
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+Apache web server through Tor. By doing this, they can access your server
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but won't know who they are connecting to. You want clients to use the
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standard port 80 when accessing your server. However, if your Apache
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server is actually running on port 8080 locally, client connections need
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