Package: anon Version: 0.4.9.7-dev-20240909T133353Z-1~jammy+1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Serhii Varakuta Installed-Size: 5523 Depends: libc6 (>= 2.34), libcap2 (>= 1:2.10), libevent-2.1-7 (>= 2.1.8-stable), liblzma5 (>= 5.1.1alpha+20120614), libseccomp2 (>= 0.0.0~20120605), libssl3 (>= 3.0.0~~alpha1), libsystemd0, libzstd1 (>= 1.4.0), zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), adduser, debconf (>= 0.5) | debconf-2.0, lsb-base Recommends: logrotate, anon-geoipdb Suggests: mixmaster, socat, apparmor-utils, nyx, obfs4proxy Conflicts: libssl0.9.8 (<< 0.9.8g-9) Homepage: https://ator.io/ Priority: optional Section: net Filename: pool/main/a/anon/anon_0.4.9.7-dev-20240909T133353Z-1~jammy+1_amd64.deb Size: 1780168 SHA512: 793ea4c8a369a5b58947e627b6fa4d33b70d32b5f2f7e13a66696a48833001aa99c23a79edd33225238180141d52ce163dedae7c0ca8e530fd81b1bc10c7f7ce SHA256: 2a9dcfaea59fcf5c75a9e80a76778b3d9ae7d98ed2d98dfdf984786252551423 SHA1: 9f2c17f813b621624656675d91accce816fee87d MD5sum: 0c4dacfe39ea1514a1c3da3281c39307 Description: anonymizing overlay network for TCP Tor is a connection-based low-latency anonymous communication system. . Clients choose a source-routed path through a set of relays, and negotiate a "virtual circuit" through the network, in which each relay knows its predecessor and successor, but no others. Traffic flowing down the circuit is decrypted at each relay, which reveals the downstream relay. . Basically, Tor provides a distributed network of relays. Users bounce their TCP streams (web traffic, ftp, ssh, etc) around the relays, and recipients, observers, and even the relays themselves have difficulty learning which users connected to which destinations. . This package enables only a Tor client by default, but it can also be configured as a relay and/or a hidden service easily. . Client applications can use the Tor network by connecting to the local socks proxy interface provided by your Tor instance. If the application itself does not come with socks support, you can use a socks client such as torsocks. . Note that Tor does no protocol cleaning on application traffic. There is a danger that application protocols and associated programs can be induced to reveal information about the user. Tor depends on Torbutton and similar protocol cleaners to solve this problem. For best protection when web surfing, the Tor Project recommends that you use the Tor Browser Bundle, a standalone tarball that includes static builds of Tor, Torbutton, and a modified Firefox that is patched to fix a variety of privacy bugs. Package: anon-geoipdb Source: anon Version: 0.4.9.7-dev-20240909T133353Z-1~jammy+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Serhii Varakuta Installed-Size: 10708 Depends: anon (>= 0.4.9.7-dev-20240909T133353Z-1~jammy+1) Breaks: anon (<< 0.2.4.8) Replaces: anon (<< 0.2.4.8) Homepage: https://ator.io/ Priority: optional Section: net Filename: pool/main/a/anon/anon-geoipdb_0.4.9.7-dev-20240909T133353Z-1~jammy+1_all.deb Size: 1277272 SHA512: 26e89cf1373985ece9e75afc29aab8a5e42940b913060fa28906e55786d5cdff4d96a7a8ea593cbb356a2d3109011a07f4c32bceff4c0e5eb841b182c25c4f62 SHA256: cdddcf27dedd3db06567ca731cbbc2e5cb9cd5f4bdd52999c5e0f50bb69f3b71 SHA1: 9e35e4b619eef77c0ed86cfcaddc7d9fbe8853e5 MD5sum: 8452b5759846c7f2883493340efedb4f Description: GeoIP database for Tor This package provides a GeoIP database for Tor, i.e. it maps IPv4 addresses to countries. . Bridge relays (special Tor relays that aren't listed in the main Tor directory) use this information to report which countries they see connections from. These statistics enable the Tor network operators to learn when certain countries start blocking access to bridges. . Clients can also use this to learn what country each relay is in, so Tor controllers like arm or Vidalia can use it, or if they want to configure path selection preferences.