France wants to ban Tor after the Paris attacks
[30 Points] None:
[19 Points] Idontusexanax:
ban Tor
LOL
[8 Points] shadowofashadow:
Yeah because history has shown how well prohibition works. If this goes through there will be a new system in months if not days.
Imagine if you could fail daily at your job and evrytime your boss asks for s recommendation you suggest the same plan that failed the previous time. You'd be fired pretty fast. Not if you're the state.
[5 Points] None:
Not gonna happen.
[4 Points] Tests4U:
So they are trying to do the same thing china did.
Maybe they will have better luck, because it sure didn't work out for China.
[3 Points] None:
But they ain't gonnaa!
[2 Points] None:
As wealth and power is hoarded by fewer and fewer people the control that those people exert of their population increases. It has to and so it is.
None of this has anything to do with ISIS. It'll come out in a few decades time that Western states organised or allowed these attacks to happen in order to drag Europe in to another American conflict. The goal of which is to seize and secure assets - wealth and power. Fuck all to do with bearded rag heads that are created by Western countries and their puppets in Saudi and Turkey anyway.
[1 Points] None:
[deleted]
[1 Points] pissedoffhappy:
The document suggests that the country will “Forbid free and shared Wi-Fi connections” during the state of emergency that is currently in place. Police have suggested that public Wi-Fi networks allow people to use the internet without being tracked, according to the document.
The country is also looking to ban the anonymous Tor browser, a move that has only been attempted in Iran and China.
That software and network sends users’ traffic around the internet before it gets to its destination, hiding the IP address of the computer that originally made the request.
As such, it is used by terrorists and cybercriminals to communicate and find information without being tracked. But it also allows journalists, whistleblowers and other groups who might want to hide their browsing to do so, and was originally developed in partnership with the US government.
Blocking the technology is difficult, and previous attempts in other countries have had only limited success.
In China, connections to known parts of the network are banned — and the country’s “great firewall” also means that it can watch all connections and analyse the traffic for potential browsing. It is likely that if France follows through on the plans that it would have to institute a similarly large-scale internet surveillance and control plan.
[-2 Points] goodbyeTOR:
or we can not even use tor...
Safe market seems to be removing the need for tor and decentralizing the market place http://safemarket.github.io
good luck with that shit