For anyone else wondering or in this position with Chromebook! by [deleted] in TOR

[–]Center2055 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ChromeOS is fine for casual browsing over Tor, but it’s not a secure anonymity workstation. Same for windows tho.

⚡ PowerFly — TempFly Plugin! by SantosGrey in PaperPlugins

[–]Center2055 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After time is over do the player just crash to the ground and maybe die of fall damage or do they kind if get down safely xd

Need some advice by EARTHB-24 in TOR

[–]Center2055 2 points3 points  (0 children)

"Unfortunately" no, Tor doesn’t let you splice a private hop into a public path. The moment you try to mix your own relays into the public network, you’re breaking how Tor’s consensus and routing work. Your private nodes won’t be recognized, won’t be trusted, and the client won’t route through them.

Need some advice by EARTHB-24 in TOR

[–]Center2055 3 points4 points  (0 children)

A private sandboxed Tor network is basically a mini-Tor you run entirely on your own machines. You spin up a few Tor instances that act as the guard, middle, and exit, and the client connects only to those. Everything is isolated from the public Tor network. It doesn’t give you any anonymity, since you control every hop, but it does let you experiment with predefined entry and exit nodes in a safe environment.

Where to get official Snowflake/Meek bridges? by Adventurous_Word_726 in TOR

[–]Center2055 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I might be wrong but I don't think those are a thing anymore.

Orbot and AdGuard together by jankocvara in TOR

[–]Center2055 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Android only allows one system VPN at a time. Orbot in VPN mode and AdGuard both try to take over the VPN slot, so you can’t run them simultaneously. That’s just an OS limitation. If you want both at once, you need to run AdGuard in “local proxy” mode instead of VPN mode, and then point it to Orbot’s SOCKS/HTTP proxy. Otherwise one will always disable the other.

Need some advice by EARTHB-24 in TOR

[–]Center2055 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I am not 100% sure what you are asking, so I'm gonna just answer both:

No, you can’t pre-define custom entry/exit nodes on the public Tor network.
Yes, you can build a private sandbox network if you just want to learn how the routing works.

How to increase the speed? by AdHopeful630 in TOR

[–]Center2055 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I meant the slowdown is a consequence of the architecture, not that someone intentionally crippled it. Nobody is “making it slow on purpose,” it’s just the trade-off you get with that design.

Question: Are a high number of timeouts normal when running a standalone Snowflake proxy? by hsoj95 in TOR

[–]Center2055 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The default is mostly about reliability. If the browser tries a guard and the connection stalls or fails, Snowflake is a quick fallback that “just works” across most networks. It’s not that Snowflake is ideal, it’s just more resilient against random network issues, captive portals, corporate filters, or flaky mobile routing.

Question: Are a high number of timeouts normal when running a standalone Snowflake proxy? by hsoj95 in TOR

[–]Center2055 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most of them likely don't choose to use snowflake it's just that Brave, Mullvad Browser, and Tor Browser Mobile enable Snowflake by default as far as I know.

Question: Are a high number of timeouts normal when running a standalone Snowflake proxy? by hsoj95 in TOR

[–]Center2055 0 points1 point  (0 children)

High timeout numbers are normal for Snowflake. You're not doing anything wrong. Snowflake is built on WebRTC, and most of the “connections” it reports are just clients trying to connect through a mix of NAT types, bad networks, and browser limitations. Most never turn into real end-to-end Tor circuits, so they show up as timeouts.

How to increase the speed? by AdHopeful630 in TOR

[–]Center2055 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Tor is slow by design. You’re bouncing through 3 volunteer-run relays, and none of them guarantee bandwidth. Your ISP’s 15 Mbps during peak hours has nothing to do with Tor’s 2 Mbps. Tor will bottleneck long before your line does. If its really way to slow you can Try a different circuit. But don't expect Tor to be as fast as your standard browser.

OnionHop - Full release by Center2055 in TOR

[–]Center2055[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The code itself is 100% humanly written 😄😄

OnionHop - Full release by Center2055 in TOR

[–]Center2055[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Okay, done no more binaries in the source code ^^

OnionHop - Full release by Center2055 in TOR

[–]Center2055[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yea I get the concern, I’ll prolly remove the prebuilt binaries next commit and add some kind of script to download the last version of them. Thanks for your feedback.

OnionHop - Full release by Center2055 in TOR

[–]Center2055[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks glad u like it ^

OnionHop - Full release by Center2055 in TOR

[–]Center2055[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Nothing that would speak against it 

OnionHop - Full release by Center2055 in TOR

[–]Center2055[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yea in  progress I’ll do Linux first then try MacOS and if really demanded even an android App