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- The Onion Routing (TOR) Frequently Asked Questions
- --------------------------------------------------
- 1. General.
- 1.1. What is Tor?
- Tor is an implementation of version 2 of Onion Routing.
- Go read the tor-design.pdf for the details.
- In brief, Onion Routing is a connection-oriented anonymizing communication
- service. Users choose a source-routed path through a set of nodes, and
- negotiate a "virtual circuit" through the network, in which each node
- knows its predecessor and successor, but no others. Traffic flowing down
- the circuit is unwrapped by a symmetric key at each node, which reveals
- the downstream node.
- Basically Tor provides a distributed network of servers ("onion
- routers"). Users bounce their tcp streams (web traffic, ftp, ssh, etc)
- around the routers, and recipients, observers, and even the routers
- themselves have difficulty tracking the source of the stream.
- 1.2. Why's it called Tor?
- Because Tor is the onion routing system. I kept telling people I was
- working on onion routing, and they said "Neat. Which one?" Even if onion
- routing has become a standard household term, this is the actual onion
- routing project, started out of the Naval Research Lab.
- (Theories about recursive acronyms are ok too. It's also got a fine
- translation into German.)
- 1.3 Is there a backdoor in Tor?
- Not right now, but if this answer changes we probably won't be allowed
- to tell you. You should always check the source (or at least the diffs
- since the last release) for suspicious things; and if we don't give you
- source, that's a sure sign something funny could be going on.
- 2. Compiling and installing.
- [Read the README file for now; check back here once we've got packages/etc
- for you.]
- 3. Running Tor.
- 3.1. What kind of server should I run?
- The same executable functions as both client and server, depending on
- which ports are specified in the configuration file. You can specify:
- * SocksPort: client applications (eg privoxy, Mozilla) can speak socks to
- this port.
- * ORPort: other onion routers connect to this port
- * DirPort: onion proxies and onion routers speak http to this port, to
- pull down a directory of which nodes are currently available.
- 3.2. So I can just run a full onion router and join the network?
- No. Users should run just an onion proxy. If you start up a full onion
- router, the rest of the routers in the system won't recognize you,
- so they will reject your handshake attempts.
- 3.3. How do I join the network then?
- If you just want to use the onion routing network, you can run a proxy
- and you're all set. If you want to run a router, you must convince
- the directory server operators (currently arma@mit.edu) that you're a
- trustworthy and reliable person. From there, the operators add you to
- the directory, which propagates out to the rest of the network. All
- nodes will know about you within a half hour.
- 3.4. I want to run a directory server too.
- If you run a very reliable node, you plan to be around for a long time,
- and you want to spend some time ensuring that router operators are
- people we know and like, we may want you to run a directory server
- too. We must manually add you to the 'dirservers' file that's part of
- the distribution; users will only know about you when they upgrade to
- a new version. Of course, you can always just start up your router as a
- directory server too --- but users won't know to ask you for directories,
- and more importantly, you'll never learn from the real directory servers
- about recently joined routers.
- 4. Development.
- 4.1. Who's doing this?
- 4.2. Can I help?
- 4.3. I've got a bug.
- 5. Anonymity.
- 5.1. So I'm totally anonymous if I use Tor?
- 5.2. Where can I learn more about anonymity?
- 5.3. What attacks remain against onion routing?
- 6. Comparison to related projects.
- 6.1. Onion Routing.
- Tor *is* onion routing.
- 6.2. Freedom.
- 7. Protocol and application support.
- 7.1. http? ftp? udp? socks? mozilla?
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