Tor Browser
Tor Browser
Tor is a top free tool for maintaining online privacy. It has been widely discussed in recent news, with both positive and negative aspects. On the positive side, it enables activists to reach restricted sites like Facebook and YouTube in places such as China, Syria, Iran, and North Korea. On the negative side, it can be exploited by criminals, including drug dealers using Bitcoin for illicit sales (like Silk Road). It may also be misused by pedophiles to share child abuse content with difficulty being traced. Your thoughts on Tor are welcome—feel free to explore further by searching online. Best regards, RoyalistGamer
TOR needs to be broken down into countless fragments, it is utilized by those in lower ranks /thread.
I prefer TOR because it bypasses school kid protection software.
The fundamental idea behind Tor, known as onion routing, was created in the mid-1990s by mathematicians from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Paul Syverson, along with computer scientists Michael Reed and David Goldschlag. Its goal was to secure U.S. intelligence communications online. DARPA expanded onion routing in 1997. In December 2006, Dingledine, Mathewson and several others established The Tor Project, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit focused on research and education. The Electronic Frontier Foundation supported the project initially. Early backers included the U.S. International Broadcasting Bureau, Internews, Human Rights Watch, the University of Cambridge, Google, and Stichting.net from the Netherlands. The Tor Project highlights users such as ordinary individuals seeking privacy, activists and journalists avoiding censorship, and military personnel wanting secure communications.