Hi Luna,
Tor is a network designed for private internet connections -- it is very very difficult to figure out who is connecting to what when the connection is using Tor, because the traffic is bounced through at least three hops. However, by default, it is easy for an internet provider to see which of its customers are connecting to Tor itself, and block them. So, Tor added "bridges", which are secret first hops that get handed out via various channels to users. Snowflake is part of that system of bridges. When you set up a Snowflake proxy, the people connecting through you don't connect to whatever site they're accessing directly, they just connect to Tor, which then connects them to whatever site they're accessing. That is, because Snowflake is the first hop in the connection, you can see people connecting through your proxy, but neither you nor your internet provider can see where the connection is ultimately going. (The "exit node" in that quote is the last of the hops, so the one who can see where the traffic is going, and the IP traffic looks like it's coming from for the website operator. Snowflake can't run as an exit node, so it's just saying you don't need to worry about things like websites blocking you for connecting too many times, etc..)
Hopefully that helps. If you have more questions, you can try Tor's support page:
https://support.torproject.org/
or the Tor forum:
- Justin
On 2022-09-23 12:56, Luna Manaugh via anti-censorship-team wrote:
Hi there,
I don't have a background in programming. Would you care to explain to me in plain language and convincing evidence that it is entirely safe to volunteer for snowflake to help those in heavily censored countries access internet? How's that possible if they can anything with my IP?
While I read this on your website, I'm not quite sure I understand what it means: "There is no need to worry about which websites people are accessing through your proxy. Their visible browsing IP address will match their Tor exit node, not yours".
Best
Luna
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