I would imagine most users of Tor are using Tor Browser. I am reading there was a responsible disclosure to Mozilla but is it me or did that section leave out when the Tor Project planned to respond or release a fixed Tor Browser? Do they like keep very close or is there a large lag?
Not sure about "most". I use tor without a tor browser, because I don't care about being identified. I only used it to go around geoblocking and visit onion sites.
Me too, in the sense that I can see why people freak out about spiders, but it's difficult to come up with any realistic scenario where you need to be worried about a random attacker standing behind you looking over your shoulder to write down your password as you install a server.
Yeah. It's the first production Mac using an A-chip and is a Mac that has had many things cut out for savings. The question is did Apple feature cut required functionality.
Maybe the same way Steve Jobs did the no plate thing. Maybe he just keeps cycling them. Might even send them to the labs at Ford for destructive analysis after each one is legally done.
"It’s a testament to their persistence that they’re managed to keep this up for over 10 years, and I for one will be buying Denis/Masha/whoever a well deserved cup of coffee."
Revealing publicly available information (actually publicly available, in the sense of "any person can easily look this up", not "publicly available" in a sense of "publicly available in leaked databases", which actual doxxers use as an excuse for their actions) isn't doxxing.
Doxxing has never been restricted to just leaked databases. I'd argue that any publishing of personal information in a context in which the individual clearly doesn't want to be identified counts.
The owner of the site is not identified anywhere on the site itself. And I think we can both agree that it's the sort of site whose owner would prefer to remain as anonymous as possible. The blog post digs up information about the owner from whois records, which do count as easily accessible public information, but then links to Kiwifarms of all places, and goes on to talk about identifying writing patterns and doing "detective work" involving cross-referencing profile pictures of accounts on various websites that were obviously not intentionally linked together by their owner. This is a textbook doxxing attempt.
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