Learn, hack!

Hacking and security documentation: slides, papers, video and audio recordings. All in high-quality, daily updated, avoiding security crap documents. Spreading hacking knowledge, for free, enjoy. Follow on .

Current events in Tor development

Type
Audio
Tags
Tor
Authors
Roger Dingledine
Event
Chaos Communication Congress 24th (24C3) 2007
Indexed on
Mar 27, 2013
URL
http://dewy.fem.tu-ilmenau.de/CCC/24C3/mp3/24c3-2325-en-current_events_in_tor_development.mp3
File name
24c3-2325-en-current_events_in_tor_development.mp3
File size
24.7 MB
MD5
cc8c37f9d83aadd6d74713370499b1dc
SHA1
7c3316b74587e8bac2d9e2f5bad7121ec27d2f0a

Come talk with Roger Dingledine, Tor project leader, about some of the challenges in the anonymity world. How do we get enough users? How do we get enough servers? How does public perception impact the level of anonymity a system can provide? How should we be interacting with law enforcement? How can we patch Wikipedia so it no longer needs to fear anonymous users -- or can we do it without changing Wikipedia at all? Can we protect Tor users who want to keep running their active content plugins? When are we going to see well-documented and well-analyzed LiveCD, USB, virtual machine, and wireless router images for easier and safer deployment? Should Tor switch to transporting IP packets, or should it continue to work at the TCP layer? How do we scale the directory system while handling heterogeneous and unreliable nodes, and without sacrificing security? Are three-hop paths really still better than two hops? What are the performance/legal/security tradeoffs of caching content at the exit nodes? Are padding and traffic shaping still bad ideas? Why aren't more people using hidden services and censorship-resistant publishing? Is everybody comfortable with having corporate and government users on the same network? How's it going with China and Saudi Arabia? What development projects does The Tor Project need your help with? Roger will give you his best answers for some of these topics and more, but you are encouraged to bring your own questions too.

About us

Secdocs is a project aimed to index high-quality IT security and hacking documents. These are fetched from multiple data sources: events, conferences and generally from interwebs.

Statistics

Serving 8166 documents and 531.0 GB of hacking knowledge, indexed from 2419 authors from 163 security conferences.

Contribute

To support this site and keep it alive, you can click on the buttons below. Any help is really appreciated! This service is provided for free, but real money is needed to pay bills.

Flattr this Click here to lend your support to: Keep live SecDocs for an year and make a donation at www.pledgie.com !