Package: anon Version: 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d12.bookworm+1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Yurii Kovalchuk Installed-Size: 5898 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, runit-helper (>= 2.14.0~), lsb-base Recommends: logrotate, anon-geoipdb Suggests: mixmaster, socat, apparmor-utils, nyx, obfs4proxy Conflicts: libssl0.9.8 (<< 0.9.8g-9) Breaks: runit (<< 2.1.2-51~) Homepage: https://ator.io/ Priority: optional Section: net Filename: pool/main/a/anon/anon_0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d12.bookworm+1_amd64.deb Size: 2138376 SHA512: 98696f97c5a55e0264ca3dbf087c03a49f9ca6fd4763c09dc3cc499ed6bc3c2db87b5a82e14017b170083126309cbe702172ec5ccca9b87a3a77a7bf5000fd36 SHA256: 7b87ea90ef136015346eeaf5ccd03e602884de6d17adcb6cbcfd714ab92bb558 SHA1: 3e421cc27c8b6276d65b565a7552f2cd65ffefe0 MD5sum: 86c4cd1c023b06dcaeeb47047a8e9710 Description: anonymizing overlay network for TCP Anon 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, Anon 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 Anyone client by default, but it can also be configured as a relay and/or a hidden service easily. . Client applications can use the Anyone network by connecting to the local socks proxy interface provided by your Anon instance. . Note that Anon 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. Package: anon-dbgsym Source: anon Version: 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d12.bookworm+1 Auto-Built-Package: debug-symbols Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Yurii Kovalchuk Installed-Size: 6188 Depends: anon (= 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d12.bookworm+1) Breaks: anon-dbg (<< 0.3.1.5-alpha) Replaces: anon-dbg (<< 0.3.1.5-alpha) Priority: optional Section: debug Filename: pool/main/a/anon/anon-dbgsym_0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d12.bookworm+1_amd64.deb Size: 5760328 SHA512: 7e0e543f91df5df71fd1cd8e32b29579f492f11872adb19c4abf944d051a45024d13c7c17f792d814c023d1056c375bfe40a08c735af66aaa4563f9998fa5d55 SHA256: 6de57f971db2d997eb90b7a78c2c8d932689e93b092f78e553a0a898c8ac3654 SHA1: 223cf962eacab8cd9b20510105e0955b6e0b8b3b MD5sum: f1b40991dc5f0edc1738fc4c57e10953 Description: debug symbols for anon Build-Ids: 076e780d92e06274c2fda5d5bf28cb2d43b420cb 174ec2d7bd12332c3256d975e68f18b33e1af0b8 3ed29853a89b21a617a641b9e85b40d83f8ee4d3 50f2bda9cedd5d1a21878565d00933eebf5a99a6 Package: anon-geoipdb Source: anon Version: 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d12.bookworm+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Yurii Kovalchuk Installed-Size: 17523 Depends: anon (>= 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d12.bookworm+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_0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d12.bookworm+1_all.deb Size: 2326724 SHA512: 6b90f2eab235997d5031c0e80b36dabc8237d7de411bce934ad34470d72c12f316c954af1b32a0f92c1536ef0091cd61698fd38728a6648be1fd661c7a209be5 SHA256: e386e41666c7cb0c2907c5500e322a98a7bc93608295daf1bab35a790db79af8 SHA1: d3841bf671ad5ca4fc4f44d6313e749f4098d441 MD5sum: 723311046b566df06e9d555b9ed3a0de Description: GeoIP database for Anon This package provides a GeoIP database for Anon, i.e. it maps IPv4 addresses to countries. . Bridge relays (special Anon relays that aren't listed in the main Anon directory) use this information to report which countries they see connections from. These statistics enable the Anyone network operators to learn when certain countries start blocking access to bridges.