Tor Project 2008 Tax Return Now Online

Anon Mus my.green.lantern at googlemail.com
Sun Aug 15 10:22:57 UTC 2010


Jimmy Dioxin wrote:
> The US Government also gets extensive use out of Tor. Law enforcement
> uses it for informants etc. As explained on the Tor website, this is
> actually a good thing as it makes you more anonymous (are you a fed, a
> journalist, somebody looking for porn, etc)
>
> Jimmy Dioxin
>   


Actually, you haven't really worked it out yet, so let me try and put 
you on the right track.

If you have no protection from a global adversary using timing attacks, 
who had such massive access then there is NO anonymity for the ordinary 
Tor user, because there is ALWAYS a timing attack solution (from 
automated passive data analysis) which identifies the originating ip 
making exit node to open net request. Even the location of Tor hidden 
services  and their users is easy (and automatic).

So it matters not a jot that the US mil or gov uses the Tor service 
itself, even assuming that they are not using a modified Tor client to 
improve their anonymity and possibly aso identify their streams from the 
rest (only they will know how this can be done) .

Think  military, think intel community and never assume they are 
"playing the game". What would you do in their jobs?
> On 08/14/2010 07:26 AM, Anon Mus wrote:
>   
>> Jimmy Dioxin wrote:
>>     
>>> Hey Folks,
>>>
>>> Cryptome has posted the Tor Project 2008 Tax Return available at:
>>> http://cryptome.org/0002/tor-2008.zip
>>>
>>> As many know, all US non-profit corporation returns are available upon
>>> request by the public.
>>>
>>> Firstly, people need to look through these returns in the same way we
>>> audit code. Looking at funding sources and expenditures is important to
>>> insuring Tor is a useful anonymity tool for years to come.
>>>
>>>   
>>>       
>> Thanks for this.
>>
>> It looks like 90% of the funding is from the US, nearly all US government.
>>
>>
>> Internews Europe - France      $183,180 (35.6%)
>> (http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Internews)
>> Stichting Nlnet - Netherlands   $42,931
>> International Broadcasting       $260,000 (50.5%))
>> (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Broadcasting_Bureau)
>> Google US                             $28,500 (5.5%)
>>
>> Total                                       $514,611
>>
>>
>> Add to this the number of Tor nodes run from US institutions (many at US
>> gov funded edu's) and  you should be able to see who that "Global
>> Adversary" is!
>>
>> ****  US - GOV ****
>>
>> So perhaps we should not expect Tor to protect us from the hand that
>> feeds it (and anyone else who has access to their data)
>>
>>
>>     
>>> Secondly, can the Tor project release these returns on the site for the
>>> above purpose? I don't think there needs to be some onerous accounting
>>> process for reporting to the public (ya'll have better things to do
>>> anyways), but these returns would be nice to have in the interest of
>>> transparency.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Jimmy Dioxin
>>>
>>>   
>>>       
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>>     
>
>   

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