'tor' is an implementation of The Onion Routing system, as described in a bit more detail at http://www.onion-router.net/. You can read list archives, and subscribe to the mailing list, at http://archives.seul.org/or/dev/. Is your question in the FAQ? Should it be? ************************************************************************** See the INSTALL file for a quickstart. That is all you will probably need. ************************************************************************** ************************************************************************** You only need to look beyond this point if the quickstart in the INSTALL doesn't work for you. ************************************************************************** Do you want to run a tor server? First, move sample-server-torrc onto torrc, and edit it. Create the DataDirectory, and make sure it's owned by whoever will be running tor. Fix your system clock so it's not too far off. Make sure name resolution works. Make sure other people can reliably resolve the Address you chose. Then run tor to generate keys. One of the files generated in your DataDirectory is your 'fingerprint' file. Mail it to arma@mit.edu. Remember that you won't be able to authenticate to the other tor nodes until I've added you to the directory. Configuring tsocks: If you want to use Tor for protocols that can't use Privoxy, or with applications that are not socksified, then download tsocks (tsocks.sourceforge.net) and configure it to talk to localhost:9050 as a socks4 server. My /etc/tsocks.conf simply has: server_port = 9050 server = 127.0.0.1 (I had to "cd /usr/lib; ln -s /lib/libtsocks.so" to get the tsocks library working after install, since my libpath didn't include /lib.) Then you can do "tsocks ssh arma@moria.mit.edu". But note that if ssh is suid root, you either need to do this as root, or cp a local version of ssh that isn't suid.