You can use an Amazon EC2 G-Instance and Scallion if you don't have a good GPU.
Am 01.01.2016 um 20:18 schrieb Manager Bahia del Sol LLC:
There is also Scallion https://github.com/lachesis/scallion
and Eshalot https://github.com/ReclaimYourPrivacy/eschalot
The hardware facebook used to bruteforce their onion address must have been very impressive.
Message: 2 Date: Thu, 31 Dec 2015 10:33:19 -0900 From: Jesse V <kernelcorn@riseup.net mailto:kernelcorn@riseup.net> To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org mailto:tor-relays@lists.torproject.org Subject: Re: [tor-relays] tor hidden services & SSL EV certificate Message-ID: <568582FF.40409@riseup.net mailto:568582FF.40409@riseup.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252"
On 12/31/2015 05:44 AM, Benoit Chesneau wrote:
Thanks it's useful :) I am know wondering how i can bruteforce a clear name for my site like facebook but i think it's all good for the rest :)
Like this: https://github.com/katmagic/Shallot
It doesn't look like it's maintained, so you may want to examine forks, but I've had success with Shallot as it is.
-- Jesse V
-- Manager of Bahia del Sol LLC
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On 01/01/2016 10:21 AM, Josef Stautner wrote:
You can use an Amazon EC2 G-Instance and Scallion if you don't have a good GPU.
That is not a good idea, since then you are given them your private key. I trust Amazon, but not that much. People have posted on the /r/onions or /r/tor subreddit with similar pay-for-prefix services, and they continue to get shot down for this same reason. It's better to brute-force the prefix yourself.
Facebook's onion prefix is impressive, but I think it was a coincidence and good luck, which is also reiterated in this blog post: https://blog.torproject.org/blog/facebook-hidden-services-and-https-certs
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