Package: anon Version: 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d11.bullseye+1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Yurii Kovalchuk Installed-Size: 5931 Depends: libc6 (>= 2.29), libcap2 (>= 1:2.10), libevent-2.1-7 (>= 2.1.8-stable), liblzma5 (>= 5.1.1alpha+20120614), libseccomp2 (>= 0.0.0~20120605), libssl1.1 (>= 1.1.1), libsystemd0, libzstd1 (>= 1.4.0), zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), adduser, debconf (>= 0.5) | debconf-2.0, runit-helper (>= 2.10.0~), lsb-base Recommends: logrotate, anon-geoipdb Suggests: mixmaster, socat, apparmor-utils, nyx, obfs4proxy Conflicts: libssl0.9.8 (<< 0.9.8g-9) Breaks: runit (<< 2.1.2-36~) Homepage: https://ator.io/ Priority: optional Section: net Filename: pool/main/a/anon/anon_0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d11.bullseye+1_amd64.deb Size: 2172736 SHA512: ce49bf269801373003239a4c035416998525f31c66b5914ed78b514f1842470c867e7c63b4ffa4fb4165fe40581b4718b471695032999f9c4a8a4df3d4f92863 SHA256: f50936cb86322466ec4b137cc068d8f2938bc03f5709009cfd7377fbd9850ea7 SHA1: f3342a254c2e446beb5d4d95b8b1a6bfc6f06a4f MD5sum: b9136fd63ed77a9822e63d15d9835b9b 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~d11.bullseye+1 Auto-Built-Package: debug-symbols Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Yurii Kovalchuk Installed-Size: 6118 Depends: anon (= 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d11.bullseye+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~d11.bullseye+1_amd64.deb Size: 5676384 SHA512: 6c1fe3d43c99ea032429da73757d31c434942f4f025b0ced9a7ac91bdc7ffb9af398a3b61cd40a701dfc3db40afa495c0c43b81252b5ca31f206e66625812d0b SHA256: d0a54cc309e1845d2ca5fdbdea7e56ecbc851439689d71cf6f860a367c566ee2 SHA1: 8d9e324eff172be541f109a18cabd1e6bf771562 MD5sum: 57ff3a2646cec3471421a6102fa61152 Description: debug symbols for anon Build-Ids: 1b83bf70ec731fd904c52613afd6b4a25ea12c9d 2add5276c6d7162fa5d9bb5216ad908d24eee35c 3c71d7e2edf253bf3319b14817f65c09bdaf61c3 f93e5da70334a0102b9d5a0ffca0dd6c37d75f88 Package: anon-geoipdb Source: anon Version: 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d11.bullseye+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Yurii Kovalchuk Installed-Size: 17550 Depends: anon (>= 0.4.9.12-stage-20260306T210558Z-1~d11.bullseye+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~d11.bullseye+1_all.deb Size: 2343488 SHA512: 3d6436e2dc2adb0a250fb673ac84a05dbc9fa75c1bb89d10867fb19f797658bfa38ea228b219c50b775e250c87226112a4a606398680e0e7842ad904f4e1f1e7 SHA256: d965aa53cd83815631a22781ad15b40b7bf4b4a1f7b344a6ce84e77e1154b2e8 SHA1: 53c616f082c8124b90edfaf6867ac2b6429e2642 MD5sum: 5f82359bba894fd43ab71aaabcf5f0bd 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.