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Raspberry Pi Tor relay

Raspberry Pi Tor relay

How to become anonymous online Online life is quickly eroding our usual feelings of personal anonymity. Services like Facebook mean that people are able to delve into our lives like never before. Stalking, whistle blowing, even watching TV programmes broadcast in other countries; these and other online activities all rely on some form of online anonymity – or lack of it. We humans don't generally like strangers knowing all about us, but we may be unwittingly providing people with details of our lives we'd rather were kept out of the public gaze. Luckily, there are several steps you can take to stay incognito online, and even some that can reduce the amount of spam email messages you receive. Keep your email secret Your email address is a big part of your online identity. If the sites you register with aren't secure, hackers can access the database containing all the user credentials, and the email addresses are sure to be sold on. Luckily, you can use a throwaway address to avoid these problems.

How to be anonymous online with Incognito At first glance Incognito may seem suited only for the extremely paranoid, because of the totality of tools it offers to hide your online presence. But those tools, each designed to mask a certain aspect of your online activity, have been around for quite a while. This 430MB-ish live CD has many faithful users, but I can't quote any on its usefulness since their identities couldn't be confirmed. If you're looking for the ultimate way to encrypt absolutely all your internet communications and be untraceable on the internet, you're looking for Incognito. Whether you're an anarchist, a covert operative or just someone who wants to exercise their digital rights and hide your online activity, with Incognito you can encrypt your IM conversations and emails, browse securely without the fear of cookies and the browser history revealing your secrets, and best of all, the traffic doesn't reflect in your router logs. An aside: who wants to be anonymous? Buck the trend. Managing Tor with Tork Tor 101

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