Access for the uncomputed

Joel Franusic jfranusic at gmail.com
Wed Oct 19 22:52:27 UTC 2005


I just ran across: CGIProxy
(http://www.jmarshall.com/tools/cgiproxy/cgiproxy-beta.html)

A Proxy over CGI of sorts, similar to CECID (?). This looks like a
perfect front end for Tor.

It supports SSL and it looks like it can be easily configured to use a
proxy (Tor).

Has anybody tried this out?

--Joel

On 6/22/05, Patrick Coleman <blinken at gmail.com> wrote:
> Brilliant. I'll see if I cant get something going.
> Thanks,
> Patrick
>
> Roger Dingledine wrote:
> > On Wed, Jun 22, 2005 at 10:45:17AM +0800, Patrick Coleman wrote:
> >
> >>shouldn't be too hard. I was actually considering interfacing it
> with a proper anonymizer at some
> >>point, like Tor, so I'd be happy to do that if thats what you want.
> >
> >
> > That would be wonderful. We really do need something like this, that
> > lets people point their browsers somewhere and be able to access .exit
> > or .onion addresses.
> >
> > It should be even easier to find mirrors for you now too, because the
> > mirrors don't need to be exiting the traffic themselves.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > --Roger
> >
> >
>
>
> On 23/06/05, Patrick Coleman <blinken at gmail.com> wrote:
> > [I'll mail this to the list - I am subscribed, but at blinken at gmail.com]
> >
> > Hey,
> > The client certainly hasn't had any work done on it for ages, so I was
> > thinking of ditching that, certainly after I discovered tor. It was
> > certainly a bit more complex than I bargained for :)
> >
> > With the script, it hasn't been developed in quite a while. I have
> > been intending to do some work on it, though - I've got some working
> > code that should fix a few problems, like SSL, forms and cookies.
> > These fixes will also mean a rewrite of the HTTP fetching code, so
> > working in HTTP proxying shouldn't be too hard. I was actually
> > considering interfacing it with a proper anonymizer at some point,
> > like Tor, so I'd be happy to do that if thats what you want.
> >
> > The script -shouldn't- be breaking stylesheets, so I'll have a look :)
> > Thanks,
> > Patrick
> > +++
> > Public Key ID 0x4A6880B2
> > Key Fingerprint: 7867 E238 1608 1A20 89C4  BA6C 8FC3 C6EB 4A68 80B2
> > http://warhn.org/pcoleman/pubkey.txt
> >
> > On 22/06/05, Roger Dingledine <arma at mit.edu> wrote:
> > > On Tue, Jun 21, 2005 at 03:26:33PM -0700, Joel Franusic wrote:
> > > > Some quick searches on sf.net and freshmeat.net turn up:
> > > > http://cecid.sourceforge.net/
> > > >
> > > > Links to servers running CECID:
> > > > http://cecid.sourceforge.net/mirrors.php
> > >
> > > Oh hey, and Patrick Coleman runs a Tor server too:
> > > http://serifos.eecs.harvard.edu:8000/cgi-bin/desc.pl?q=hal
> > >
> > > Patrick, how is this going? It looks like Tor can replace the more
> > > ambitious part of your project, but step one is still a hard task to
> > > get right too. :)
> > >
> > > It looks like it's GPL, which is good. But it looks like it breaks
> > > stylesheets of the pages it downloads (e.g. tor.eff.org), which is
> > > bad. What about SSL to the proxy page? Does it have a back-end that can
> > > http-proxy to privoxy, and/or socks4a-proxy to Tor?
> > >
> > > Is this still in development, or should I take the "Copyright 2003"
> > > to be a bad sign? :)
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > --Roger
> > >
> > >
> >
> > --
> > Public Key ID 0x4A6880B2
> > Key Fingerprint: 7867 E238 1608 1A20 89C4  BA6C 8FC3 C6EB 4A68 80B2
> > http://warhn.org/pcoleman/pubkey.txt
> >
>
>
> --
> Public Key ID 0x4A6880B2
> Key Fingerprint: 7867 E238 1608 1A20 89C4  BA6C 8FC3 C6EB 4A68 80B2
> http://warhn.org/pcoleman/pubkey.txt
>



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