Recent comments
smartypants wrote
Reply to comment by RandomlyGeneratedUsername in Brave Browser leaks your Tor / Onion service requests through DNS. by Rambler
Bruce Schneier is/was a NSA plant in 1993, proven by ME!
I EXPOSED HIM IN 1993 with actual proof on cyberpunks hangouts, such as usenet
Main proof, was his deliberate subverting of his Blowfish algorithm , that infected over 43 crypto library products!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blowfish_(cipher)
His Blowfish source code was deliberately subverted in a clever way by him to collapse a crypto key of 256 bits to merely 32 bits if it was derived from user entered text passphrase and the letters typed by user had the high bit set (in ANSI, the high bit is UNDEFINED, not zero, but additionally, mac and pc users can trivially type countless symbols on keyboards that have the highest bit set.
That wiki page, and most people who are not crypto experts in the early 1990s, do NOT KNOW OF NSA connection to Bruce Schneier to spread backdoors in crypto libraries!!!!
wayback machines for usenet used to exist, and could have shown a direct URL to my research proving Bruce Schneier to be under NSA control. NSA uses cash to subvert crypto libraries. Large cash payments are how NSA got engineers at apple to subvert Apples own source code "accidental changes" to SSL code in iOS.
Bruce Schneier is a FUCKING SHILL for NSA!
Remember, Bruce Schneier ALGORITHM for Blowfish was OK, it was his backdoor exploit in the free source code that he widely distributed that has the exploit to collapse and nullify all keyspace.
The high bit got erroneously smeared to all lower bits in each byte of the passphrase. This fact and exploit is still unknown out side of my typing here to you now, and the very rarely archived usenet group I posted too in 1993, 1994. I generally never publish my countless exploits I discover in hardware or software, but I am not wrong and anyone with a copy of Bruce Schneiers widely used blowfish source code promoted in 1994 can trivially verify all I wrote using a ANSI C conformant compiler.
BEWARE Bruce Schneier!
His backdoors in source code , PROVEN, may have toppled governments, promoted fraud, got political dissidents executed, and more.
BlackWinnerYoshi wrote
Reply to comment by Wahaha in Awesome Privacy: A curated list of tools and services that respect your privacy by RandomlyGeneratedUsername
TL;DR: DDG is fine for regular usage, some of its issues can be solved by using uBlock Origin.
Sure, DuckDuckGo is suspicious, but it's also a search engine that has somewhat decent results, unlike Mojeek and Wiby.me, and that's sad.
About those two issues above, tracking could be disabled if you have uBlock Origin (which you should), and ads can be disabled in settings (or with uBlock Origin, again).
And about those three other issues, well, it does suck that Gabriel Weinberg ran Names Database, and it does suck that DuckDuckGo had a tracking cookie, which I'm not sure if uBlock Origin blocked. However, I don't think it matters that DDG is in USA. I mean, just read this: https://digdeeper.neocities.org/ghost/email.html#laws
Wahaha wrote
Reply to Awesome Privacy: A curated list of tools and services that respect your privacy by RandomlyGeneratedUsername
Not sure whether I can trust that list, considering it features DuckDuckGo.
- DuckDuckGo has a tracker on the home page.
- DuckDuckGo tracks the ads you click on before redirecting you. You can see this in the screenshot below.
https://www.stoutner.com/new-default-homepage-and-search-engine/
Gabriel Weinberg, the founder of DuckDuckGo, used to run the Names Database.[1] This was a website that aimed to connect people who had lost contact by gathering lots and lots of e-mail addresses. Getting access could be done by either paying money, or submitting lots of e-mail addresses of other people. Since the service revolved around gathering personal information, it is very suspicious for Gabriel Weinberg to start a business that is privacy-oriented. [2]
DuckDuckGo used to set a tracking cookie, even though they claimed they didn't. This was done by a third party they cooperate with, which means that it wasn't necessarily intentional, but if it's unintentional, it shows a worrying lack of care.[3]
DuckDuckGo is based in the US. This makes it really easy for the NSA to compromise it. If it were based in the EU, for example, the NSA wouldn't have the legal power to force them to log everything without telling anyone. This wouldn't guarantee privacy, but it would make it a lot more plausible. Instead, they're based in the US, which means that the NSA can do whatever they want with them. There are secure search engines that are not based in the US.[3]
abuhussain wrote
it's = it is. its = possessive. That's what you want to use.
Your articles are high-quality ones. Don't degrade them by following the example of millions of people on the internet who use them wrong, or even interchangeably.
boobs wrote
apple is far worse than google and facebook when it comes to maligning tools that actively enable privacy. this is just their way of signaling virtue.
RandomlyGeneratedUsername wrote
Reply to comment by smartypants in Brave Browser leaks your Tor / Onion service requests through DNS. by Rambler
https://ramble.pw/ (not famous yet)
This is my favorite.
RandomlyGeneratedUsername wrote
Reply to comment by div1337 in Brave Browser leaks your Tor / Onion service requests through DNS. by Rambler
The only problem with Chromium is the lack of fingerprinting defenses. Brave is working on it.
https://brave.com/privacy-updates-4/
Although Tor Browser is more mature and reliable at this point.
RandomlyGeneratedUsername wrote (edited )
Reply to comment by ____ in Brave Browser leaks your Tor / Onion service requests through DNS. by Rambler
Brave is developing fingerprinting defenses too.
https://brave.com/privacy-updates-4/
Of course, Tor Browser is a mature project and more reliable at this point. Let's hope Brave continues to strengthen its privacy and reliability.
RandomlyGeneratedUsername OP wrote (edited )
Reply to comment by Rambler in Firefox ESR leaks a single word search request entered in the address bar? by RandomlyGeneratedUsername
Just tried it with a new profile. It leaks the word and opens a search page. I'm not sure why it opens test.com automatically for you.
It's ESR 78.
Rambler wrote
Reply to Firefox ESR leaks a single word search request entered in the address bar? by RandomlyGeneratedUsername
Yep, it does this. I just tested and confirmed.
07:07:21: query[A] test from 209.xx.xx.xx
07:07:21: config test is NODATA-IPv4
07:07:21: query[AAAA] test from 209.xx.xx.xx
07:07:21: config test is NODATA-IPv6
Then it went to "test.com" automatically.
RandomlyGeneratedUsername wrote
Following the discussion on /r/netsec, Bruce Schneier is also a director of the Tor Project ;)
Rambler OP wrote
Reply to comment by AWiggerInTime in Global Cloudflare outage reported. by Rambler
We never used Cloudflare for DDOS filtering. Cloudflare was honestly used out of old habit of quick DNS setup and on-the-fly SSL Certs. Habits are hard to break sometimes.
Our current service provider handles the filtering for us.
AWiggerInTime wrote
Reply to Global Cloudflare outage reported. by Rambler
So what are you behind now Rambler? VanwaTech?
AWiggerInTime wrote
I'm disappointed.
Mark Rober promised a video feed and the most we got is a Kerbal Space Program knockoff with a photo that might as well been taken by Mr.Armstrong himself with his trusty Konica.
Literally, for me the fat guy with peanuts was the highlight of the stream.
Wahaha wrote
As far as I know nothing, since these are not enforceable.
Rambler OP wrote
Reply to comment by smartypants in Brave Browser leaks your Tor / Onion service requests through DNS. by Rambler
Also , be sure to add "on my OS, on my machine, conditionals as well" to not trigger people demanding you try it on 3 ISPS on 3 machines. Ask for confirmation at top and bottom of your post to not trigger the Brave fanboy nazis thinking you are a enemy shill.
Yeah, good idea.
not_bob wrote
Reply to I2P+ 0.9.49+ released! by Rambler
I2P+ is the way to go. No doubt.
not_bob wrote
.onion is a special tld that should never be sent to a DNS server to be resolved. Ever.
Wahaha OP wrote
Reply to comment by Kalchaya in Which browsers can you trust enough to use? by Wahaha
Yes, but a browser that won't update until six months from now, can be trusted for six months. Also, a browser that you can read the source code of, in the sense that it is short enough that you can actually manage to read it in an evening or two, also has higher trust from me, like the surf browser.
Wahaha OP wrote
Reply to comment by Kalchaya in Why cookies don't get deleted from the browser unless whitelisted? by Wahaha
I kinda like the cookies that keep me logged in to websites I use frequently. Or the ones saving some layout choices, like dark mode.
smartypants wrote (edited )
Reply to comment by Rambler in Brave Browser leaks your Tor / Onion service requests through DNS. by Rambler
Thanks for your research, keep posting to all the 29 or so free speech sites... too bad Poal shadowbans, censors , deletes, and is a god damned dumpster fire.
I posted proof of two popular user upvoated topics totally censored by Poal admins this last week : https://ramble.pw/f/privacy/2387/-/comment/2901
LIST OF PLACES for you to consider posting your research and revelations!:
https://ramble.pw/f/privacy/2387/-/comment/2902
Save that list!
Also , be sure to add "on my OS, on my machine, conditionals as well" to not trigger people demanding you try it on 3 ISPS on 3 machines. Ask for confirmation at top and bottom of your post to not trigger the Brave fanboy nazis thinking you are a enemy shill.
smartypants wrote (edited )
Reply to comment by ____ in Brave Browser leaks your Tor / Onion service requests through DNS. by Rambler
Poal.co censors far far too much in Feb 2021 : two examples in my prior post.
but I agree that Rambler need to post this asking for confirmation on all the following sites , and even other less censoring subreddits on Reddit.
The top 29 known mostly Free Speech social sites, unranked :
https://boards.4chan.org/pol/
https://archive.4plebs.org/pol/ (legible nondeletable 4chan)
https://www.16chan.xyz/pol/
https://8kun.top (current 2020 8Chan, tor onion link : jthnx5wyvjvzsxtu.onion)
https://8kun.top/pnd/ (8Chan pol)
https://forum.searchvoat.co/viewforum.php?f=31 (never censors legal speech)
https://www.dailystormer.name (https://dailystormer.su/)
https://endchan.org
https://notabug.io/t/all
https://9chan.tw/bestpol/
https://phuks.co/ [server down Oct 2020, up again]
https://poal.co/ (censors speech often, proof https://files.catbox.moe/iuncm1.jpg)
https://ramble.pw/ (not famous yet)
https://wearethene.ws/ (2021 very active 8Chan Q stuff, more legible)
https://Greatawakening.win/ (Q related)
https://raddle.me/ (Raddle)
https://vnnforum.com/
https://patriots.win/ (claims to be free speech, CENSORS discussions of jews, guns, race IQ, etc)
https://ruqqus.com/+MAGA (2% of the old thedonald.win users went here, despite ruqqus censorship)
https://dstormer6em3i4km.onion.link/ [http://dstormer6em3i4km.onion/] (emergency tor onion for https://dailystormer.su/)
https://www.whitedate.net/whitedate-forums/
https://endchan.net/qanonresearch/
https://ruqqus.com/ (claims to be free speech, has leftists control a lot of it)
https://saidit.net/ (censors, but not as bad as reddit)
https://communities.win/ (censors, but not as bad as reddit)
Rambler OP wrote
Reply to Global Cloudflare outage reported. by Rambler
CF is back up. https://www.cloudflarestatus.com/
RAMBLE1 wrote
Reply to Multi-hop vpn and port forwarding by overvalley
link of that vpn ?
port-forward for p2p apps to connect. Does not affect encryption.
RandomlyGeneratedUsername OP wrote
Reply to comment by Wahaha in Awesome Privacy: A curated list of tools and services that respect your privacy by RandomlyGeneratedUsername
One of the reasons I like this list is that it contains things I've never heard of, including new search engines.