Package: anon Version: 0.4.9.7-dev-20240909T133353Z-1~lunar+1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Serhii Varakuta Installed-Size: 5500 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), libsystemd0, libzstd1 (>= 1.5.2), 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~lunar+1_amd64.deb Size: 1729698 SHA512: afede80d3b62bc7f615d9f7c283fe4a384c605bf3c6a02e0e6575b4531a2076df41cde537bef2d8ba589596a9acaad404191d80506eaac3166779638bdc2f355 SHA256: 0736e116f783a29adb73a5ed9a4a2719d5ea7fa825eb06b34a27c7fcb740981e SHA1: 242c8d6b180e0aa2ca7673c43b92bb484e61e0e0 MD5sum: 470efbea5da1f132a16b1cca5dbcd7b3 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~lunar+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Serhii Varakuta Installed-Size: 10681 Depends: anon (>= 0.4.9.7-dev-20240909T133353Z-1~lunar+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~lunar+1_all.deb Size: 1256520 SHA512: b25945997d3f6c38e9f584a5bfab25b64c18add4ef6a82fdc2a6444e7003b49339f2f2893f8ed4c6e41682f0fa41094942b7177a62568a0911bc455a663a1434 SHA256: 42f2b697cda9da789352e45e9bff623d5c30e855552ea6db11866dbc124ea37b SHA1: 470262c92c2f1d57b164c7ce570bcf81b70ef974 MD5sum: 6875c3937a434e5c87f4447f6307b4aa 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.