

- #Moncage story explained how to#
- #Moncage story explained archive#
- #Moncage story explained software#
- #Moncage story explained free#

#Moncage story explained free#
Ironically, they give these tools free advertising by drawing attention to them.
#Moncage story explained software#
It turns out that this software gives you most of the tools to bypass authoritarian censors (including those at a public library who try block selected Wikipedia articles so that you can’t read them, on their Windows PC terminals, which tells you that nothing you connect to over HTTPS there is actually secure even if there is no malware other than Windows) such as themselves and read and view whatever you want, and talk to whoever you want, on the Web. It’s ridiculous that network administrators at a library are stifling free speech based on the SPLC, but suddenly the SPLC’s “naughty software list” makes much more sense. So there’s things you can do to avoid government spying at the library and your school and break through even the most pernicious censorship regime, unless they want to do extreme damage to their WiFi network’s usability. If you don’t need a lot of privacy and just need to obfuscate what you’re doing, you can leave it at this and just use a normal browser.Īnd if none of this works, you can try NordVPN’s obfuscated VPN servers or their browser plug-in, which is basically a proxy that looks like HTTPS instead of a VPN. One easy thing you can try if you run into censors and use Brave is to just load a Private Tab with Tor and see if it’s good enough. So hey, there’s something positive that came out of centralizing the Web into the hands of a couple of monopolists? That being said, I’d be careful to use this to evade censorship at the library, but be on guard because your traffic is being tunneled through companies that have affiliations with the intelligence agencies in the United States. Obviously, that has privacy issues of its own, but it can’t easily be blocked without a lot of collateral damage. However, Tor Browser has another mode, which is intended mostly to deal with situations like the Great Firewall of China, which essentially makes it look like you’re connecting to a Web site in the Microsoft Azure or Amazon Web Services “cloud”. Did I mention expensive? Glad I’m not there anymore.) Disgusting, expensive, cramped, polluted, riots breaking out unpredictably. Life in a big liberal city is just disgusting everywhere you go. If people are watching it and you complain, they will help you move to another computer, but they won’t stop that other person unless they start playing with themselves or something. (Oddly, in Chicago, the city itself, the library doesn’t even block porn. The Supreme Court ruled on the issue of Free Speech that you have to be allowed access to the Internet without the firewall in effect, _if you specifically ask for it_.
#Moncage story explained how to#
I won’t tell here which library because I don’t want to give these jackbooted library thugs(?) any ideas about how to screw around with me if they’re not smart enough to do that already and happen to find this post in Google or something. Oddly, the library where I live lets Tor function normally even though their firewall blocks the site.

And after you’re on, you can just use Tor… They apparently advise libraries and schools to filter it out as “terrorist”, according to multiple sources I’ve spoken with.Īnyhow… If you already have the Tor Browser on your computer before you get on their WiFi, they can’t do much about that. Moving right along… The Southern Poverty Law Center is probably why you can’t access the Tor Browser’s Web site. asc key that they provide and then unpack it and then start it with.
#Moncage story explained archive#
You can verify the bundle’s archive with the. If all else failed, it’s downloadable from the Tor Project directly. However, Debian’s package doesn’t work properly on my computer, and when I open it, an invisible window the size of the browser that can’t be closed except from the task manager, or pkill, opens up.įortunately, it’s available as a Flatpak too, and that works! It downloads the Tor Browser, verifies that it’s properly signed, so you don’t get a fake one planted on your computer, which is a possibility if you went to the wrong Web site or were the victim of a MITM attack, somehow, and then puts launchers and a settings application in your menus. TThe Tor Browser Launcher is pretty neat. Guest post by Ryan, reprinted with permission from the original Posted in Bill Gates, Debian, Deception, Free/Libre Software, GNU/Linux at 9:22 pm by Guest Editorial Team 11.20.21 Tor Browser Launcher on Debian is Broken and SPLC Censorship Regime Hates Tor and FOSS, Boosts Bill Gates
