So...wouldn't the torified traffic sound like...white noise? I can fall asleep to that.
On 5/22/2015 at 6:09 PM, "Kenneth Freeman" wrote:On 05/21/2015 07:29 AM, Michael Rogers wrote:
Hi Kenneth,
What a cool idea! I played around with sonification of network
traffic
once upon a time, using kismet, tcpdump and fluidsynth glued
together
with a bit of perl. You can listen to the results here:
Seriously cool.
To avoid the privacy issues with monitoring exit node traffic,
perhaps
you could run this on the client's LAN, producing two pieces of
music,
one for unanonymised traffic and the other for the same traffic
passed
through Tor? Then we'd know what privacy sounds like. :-)
I hadn't considered the identified vis-à-vis anonymous traffic differential before. Interesting!
In a sense I'd like to do with Tor what the same sense & sensibility has already done with Wi-Fi with digital hearing aids: code transformation.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22429952.300-the-man-who-can-hear-wifi...
I haven't any skill set for coding whatsoever, but a DJ at KRBX Radio Boise hase expressed some interest (I wrote the Wikipedia article on the Treefort Music Fest), and I've spoken on the air about Tor, so an acoustic rendition of Tor is not beyond reason.