On 8/26/15, Ben Laurie ben@links.org wrote:
On Mon, 24 Aug 2015 at 19:25 Paul Syverson paul.syverson@nrl.navy.mil wrote:
If another browser it could be a setup config option whether clients can choose to be redirected via tor2web or simply always sent to a route-insecure address. I will assume for simplicity that all requests for route-insecure addresses by other browsers simply send to a route-insecure HTTPS address in the ruleset (if available). I'm going to also assume that requests for onion addresses for other browsers simply fail, although if the tor2web option was available and chosen at the time of setup, then there is another question how to offer this to the client, perhaps as an HTTPS Everywhere setting. Comments on the feasibility, usefulness, design etc. of the tor2web option would be bonus, but of course I'm most wanting to know about the viability of the most basic version of things.
Reading this made me wonder if there's a local HTTP Tor proxy, but a quick search didn't find one. Is there one? If not, why not?
There isn't a local HTTP proxy - Tor provides a local SOCKS proxy. When people need an HTTP proxy, we see that people configure an HTTP proxy to connect through Tor's SOCKS or Transparent Proxy as an upstream.
It would be easier to have a basic HTTP proxy inside of Tor or launched by Tor but no one has belled that cat.
All the best, Jacob