Safeweb Turns Off Free Service 316
An Anonymous Coward writes: "Seems like Safeweb was the last one to cancel providing free anonymizing service. Rest in peace, Safeweb, I loved you a lot. With Anonymouse down and Anonymizer.com restricted, are there any free services left for those suffering from corporate oppression?"
Sweet Irony (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sweet Irony (Score:4, Informative)
I dig it too, because that's the real irony. Anonymous Cowards here aren't, because their IP addresses are still subject to subpoena, and there's a 2 week long window where Slashdot stores the IP address as an MD5 hash, which can be easily defeated. Think Church of Scientology.
The only way to make AC posts truly "anonymous" is to post through an anonymous HTTP proxy that instantly "forgets" the source IP address. This is what Safeweb provided, and now it's gone. The irony is that the Anonymous Coward who posted the story probably isn't Anonymous.
Of course, there are still other anonymizers, but Safeweb was the best known.
Re:Sweet Irony (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, it didn't. SafeWeb kept logs for seven days [theregister.co.uk].
Re:Sweet Irony (Score:2)
Re:WTF? (Score:2, Informative)
Or better put, it effectively would end up being a 32 bit encryption key, which is VERY easy to break.
Anonymity versus Abuse (Score:2, Insightful)
Given the lengths to which a very few people will go to ruin something for everyone else, I'm not surprised several free services aren't fighting to keep their non-paying customers.
noproxy (Score:5, Informative)
Re:noproxy (Score:2)
Re:noproxy (Score:3, Interesting)
To work adequately the connection has to be encrypted (ssl should be ok here I guess), or the target-URL has to be encrypted. Otherwise it's trivial to still track usage, although, this has to be done manually (unless cgi-arg passing uses some existing de facto standard?).
You are right though, this won't work for the other big problem, snooping at the other end... And that's why safeweb (or similar) was really neat thing to have (even with those 7 days logs someone mentioned... as long as you realize it 's not all THAT anonymous).
Re:noproxy (Score:2)
Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm, you loved it a lot, but you're not willing to pay, eh? Sounds like the tombstone of every other dot-com. What's the surprise here? When people realize that you have to pay to play, maybe the dot-com economy will change. News flash, folks, if there's something good, and you love it, you need to chip in and contribute. If you don't, as they say on public radio, nobody else will.
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2, Insightful)
yeah, pay cash and wear a mask.
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:1, Flamebait)
Donations, man, just like church. (You DO go to church, don't you?) I don't give my name at church, but they get money from me every week. (Well, every couple of weeks.) Support the system, and it supports you. You don't have to be anonymous to support it - you can give your name when you support it, but it's not directly related to the services you consume. Now subscriptions, on the other hand, that's not anonymous, but donations are.
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2, Insightful)
It was not any of the user's fault.
What are we supposed to do, put cash in an envelope, write "SafeWeb" on the front, and drop it in a mailbox?
If SafeWeb was cash-strapped, they could have notified users as such, and provided ways to contrinute and/or subscribe.
They didn't. Who are you going to blame?
can you say money order? (Score:2)
Mail money order to them in an envelope.
Don't put a return address on the envelope.
Re:can you say MIA? (Score:3, Informative)
It's easier to just throw your money into a lake.
Re:can you say MIA? (Score:2)
What the hell are you talking about? I rarely put a return address on anything. Mailed a bunch of stuff out just the other day without return addresses and all got to their destinations just fine. I've yet to see anything about return addresses being required. Without some sort of proof, I've got to say, you've been misinformed...
Re:"Flamebait" moderation for religious comment (Score:2)
Amen brother!... As a rampant Darwin lovin' athiest I myself am prone to finding religion a little bit on the nose, *BUT* I defend to the hilt peoples right to have it.
It's all too easy to bait or bash ppl over having a particular religious or cultural bent, but at the end of the day , the discerning athiest really has to apply the the scientific method and say "Well, on the balance of odds and evidence, I'm pretty sure theres no God; But I could be wrong"
And presumably , as long as the religious guy ain't forcing religion down your neck, that means one has no right to reach down and yank it out of his.
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2, Informative)
If it is to stop 'them' tracking your web browsing, then what's the problem?
1: They store your User/pass along with credit card details
2: You sign in, they mask your IP through their proxy.
3: (not really a step but...)They keep no record linking your user/ip to the sites you browse.
The only problem is if you don't trust the company to not store the info. If this is the case, then the anonymising service would be useless even if free.
Oh, and if you're not happy about giving them your CC number, send a cheque.
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2)
But even if you do chip in, other people might not (they tend not to online), and you can kiss your one annual subscription/donation goodbye. It's this last point that really puts me off paying up front for online services (many of them do ask for annual or multi-month commitments), even though I do agree with your point that if you use and don't pay, you're complicit in kiling them.
I'd be more inclined to pay monthly in arrears for services that I've already used. Sure, that's not such a good deal for the service, but it might be the best way for them to survive.
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2, Informative)
Or was there some premium pay-to-use service available?
Note too that I was to pay for Freedom (by Zero Knowledge), but since they halted development of linux-version (they did have beta-version for older kernels... but I had upgraded to 2.4.x series) I couldn't. And now it would be a moot point since they threw in the towel.
Finally, like someone else said; the problem with paying is the damage to anonymity. It is kind of hard to take payments without getting the ability to track down the user. ZK did go to lengths to work around the problems, but it's not a trivial problem.
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2)
I thought that was supposed to be supported with tax dollars. Tax dollars that are collected and spent even if I don't use public radio/TV.
Yes, I understand the position these stations find themselves in with money always being cut or diverted. And no, I'm not completely heartless. Although I probably won't ever contribute to my local stations because nowadays they have too many thinly-disguised commercials!
GTRacer
- Needs to be AC every now and again...
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:3, Informative)
Nope, public radio is no longer allowed to accept government funding. Hasn't been for years. It's 100% listener-supported. For example, KUHF here in Houston is allowed to broadcast from the university campus, but that's about the only freebie they get. The government-funded thing is a common misconception.
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:3, Interesting)
Are you telling me that NONE of this money makes it to any public radio stations? Where I live, the public TV and radio station share the same facilities.
But I could be wrong. I have been wrong before...
GTRacer
- Still missing Dan Hickman and "Metro".
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2)
Does this take into account state and local government funding?
And how does that graph match your claim that "...public radio is no longer allowed to accept government funding. Hasn't been for years. It's 100% listener-supported."
2 percent isn't zero. Not trying to be anal, but I'd bet doughnuts to dollars, some fraction of my local, state and fed tax dollars are propping up public radio and TV here.
GTRacer
- And at the $90 level, we have this tote bag...
Re:Gee, big surprise there, another free site down (Score:2)
Brento used the oft-stated "If you don't, who will?" in regards to services people want but are too apathetic to pay for.
My reply is more about the fact that I already pay for public broadcasting, albeit in a very indirect and marginal way, through taxation. I have no problem with tax funds going for this purpose.
GTRacer
- Our military rocks harder on a larger scale than anyone else's!
CIA Investors (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:CIA Investors (Score:1)
Re:CIA Investors (Score:1)
Re:CIA Investors (Score:2)
Re:CIA Investors (Score:2, Informative)
http://cryptome.org/riaa-anongo.htm [cryptome.org]
Re:CIA Investors (Score:4, Interesting)
One of the suppliers to Armadillo Aerospace told me about an experiment that he tried. He was looking over the logs to his (very low traffic) site, and he wondered how an anonymized hit would show up in the logs. He went through Safeweb, and saw a properly obscured address in the logs.
One hour later, he also got a hit to the same page from cia.gov.
I'm sure this isn't standard practice for every access, but his site was probably on a hot list of some sort due to the aerospace content.
John Carmack
The solution (Score:2, Funny)
Just wear tinfoil on your head... it totally eliminates the corporate oppression! It really works! I used to be oppressed on a daily basis. But ever since I started where the tin foil hat, people avoid me like the plague! I've even seen people cross the street to avoid walking by me!
Finally! The power is mine!
Re:The solution (Score:1)
Re:The solution (Score:2)
People aren't avoiding you 'cause of the tinfoil hat. It's the swoosh brand on your forehead that freaks 'em. They haven't been sufficiently assimilated [adbusters.org] to want one of their own. Yet.
SilentSurf are (Score:5, Informative)
Aren't they mostly small services? (Score:5, Interesting)
There's possibly more safety in diversity when it comes to anonymising services. (Though that is debatable)
Hiding in crowds (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hiding in crowds (Score:1)
Re:Hiding in crowds (Score:2, Insightful)
In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if the legal system or Ashcroft wouldn't try to claim that you should be suspected of terrorist activities simply because you are using software like AT&T's crowds software. Since that kind of software doesn't ship with every PC and requires at least a bit of skill and effort to install, you will be part of a small minority if you do.
Re:Hiding in crowds (Score:2)
There is a very simple mechanism by which lawyers will likely put an end to that: if you are part of a software "crowd" and someone in that crowd does something, you will be held at least in part responsible.
Only if you have reason to believe that something illegal is being done, and you do nothing about it.
On the other hand, you're participating in a barter system, and therefore have to obtain the identies of the others in the "crowd", so you can send them 1099-Bs to report their barter income.
So? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So? (Score:2)
Re:So? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So? (Score:2)
Re:So? (Score:2)
Trust me, I run corporate firewalls and proxies.
Not so simple. you can always be found. (Score:2)
-open mail relays. For http this would be things like proxy's (~=safeweb)
-throwaway accounts. You can use them as well. Note that that is not truly anonymous, they can stil track where you are coming from (ip+time+callerid)
the reg [theregister.co.uk] had nice acticle about this a short while ago. "Do-it-yourself Internet anonymity". they have a article [theregister.co.uk] about safeweb as well.
JAP (Score:4, Informative)
working...
If you're paying, it's not anonymous (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:If you're paying, it's not anonymous (Score:4, Insightful)
Contrariwise, no anonymizing service is going to be able to retain legal services to fend off attacks on anonymity without having some form of income. So either some wealthy benefactor pays for "free" anonymity because they believe in it, or else everyone has to chip in to preserve their own privacy.
Re:If you're paying, it's not anonymous (Score:2)
Au contraire. If they are charging you (or advertisers), they are making money out of something that authorities try to paint as 'illegal activity'. Like Napster and n+1 other companies. If they are not, they are not benefiting from 'breaking the law' (as it's now jokingly termed), and perhaps had better legal standing.
Napster has/had enough money to hire the lawyers, and much good did that do to them. They got the image of a company helping thieves, and got the brutal beating.
Money is useful, sure, but obtaining it from users is not without its problems. :-/
Re:If you're paying, it's not anonymous (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:If you're paying, it's not anonymous (Score:2)
This is very true. Look at the lengths you have to go to to keep your email anonymous through the various anonymizing protocols/services. The truly paranoid will use multiple servers so that there is no single point of failure -- and cracking the chain requires a significant amount of resources. As with anything in the privacy/security/encryption arena, anything can be cracked, it is just a matter of the amount of time and resources that can be devoted to cracking and the amount of convenience that you are willing to give up for this security.
If you're just looking to bypass the corporate filtering-proxy, it won't take rocket science. If you're paranoid and don't want 'them' tracking you, well, that's another story... 'they' have infinite resources and time...
Re:If you're paying, it's not anonymous (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:If you're paying, it's not anonymous (Score:2)
Exactly why we need government backed (so it's accepted) digital [cybercash.com] cash [ecashservices.com] (a.k.a. e-cash [digicash.com]) (cash so it's anonymous).
Any bets how soon that will happen, post 9-11?
(Yes, I am aware of the downside [miami.edu].)
Sneakemail is still around (Score:3, Informative)
Alternatives? (Score:3, Interesting)
The other possibility of course is to use something like Freenet. Although nobody is totally anonymous on freenet, at least everyone is almost anonymous, which I feel is much better than the current situation. Of course, big-brother types will disagree and claim it is far too dangerous.
Get over it, or take constructive action (Score:3, Insightful)
If you feel that strongly that the world needs anonymous, untraceable email, stop whining and do somthing about it. Set up a server, host it somewhere, and let people know where it is and how to use it. If you can figure out how to make it make enough money to cover expenses, more power to ya! Free services are great, if someone else is paying the bill. It's a different story when you're the one signing the checks. If you really believe this kind of service should be free for everyone, put your money where your mouth is and underwrite the venture, otherwise shut the F*** up.
Re:Get over it, or take constructive action (Score:2)
Re:Get over it, or take constructive action (Score:2)
The world has already got anonymous, untraceable email in the cypherpunk and mixmaster remailer networks. If you really want to help out, set up one of these servers and announce yourself on alt.privacy.anon-server. If you want to know more about these systems, the best web page these days is probably here [privacyresources.org].
Of course, you should be aware that doing so will get you a lot of flames, a lot of network abuse, and such. Why? Because a lot of people don't know how to deal with real, hardcore anonymity. The people who run the remailers are dedicated privacy advocates who believe in the right to speak without fear, even if that enables some evils (spam, harassment, etc) and even if they have no control whatsoever over the data flowing through their servers.
Think about that: would you be comfortable providing an encrypted, anonymous service so powerful that neither you nor the FBI/NSA/etc would ever know about the kiddie porn and terrorist plots that could be flowing through your computer if, in return, you helped dissidents and human rights workers communicate without fear of reprisals from hostile governments and corporations? It's a tough call, but I'm certainly glad that at least a few people have the guts to publicly answer that one in the affirmative.
anonymizing services? feh (Score:4, Informative)
Re:anonymizing services? feh (Score:2)
In the works, as you say. If you're a Freenet developer working in an oppressive anti-privacy regime like China, the UK or the USA, can you (currently and effectively) use Freenet to discuss Freenet development?
Until then, anonymity is a huge boon for "criminals"; and by that I mean not just what the FBI means by criminals, I mean people doing ethical work that has been criminalised in some extreme and corrupt jurisdictions. Oh, wait, maybe I do mean what the FBI means...
let me think (Score:2, Informative)
ssh (Score:5, Informative)
Re:ssh (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:ssh (Score:2, Informative)
Re:ssh (Score:2, Informative)
Port 22
Port 8000
Re:ssh (Score:2, Interesting)
You can setup an ssh listener on any port. Even the most anal organizations with allowed Internet access leave 80 (http) and 443 (https) open outbound.
If you want to host a web page at home, host it on 80 and set up an ssh listener on 443. That's also how to defeat the AOL IM block. They have listeners on almost every dad-gum port. 21, 23, 25, 80, 443, whatever. The login box isn't serving up any other services, so ALL the well-known ports can be routed to the authentication service. If you can get out on even ONE port, chances are they'll let you in on that port.
The only large organization I've heard of that does application proxying is AT&T. Man are they bandwidth *nazis*. The shell box my friend and I use have an ssh listener on 443, and AT&T actually manages to block his ssh outbound connections on 443. Occasionally they open 22, but its closed most of the time.
Orangatango (Score:3, Informative)
Orangatango is based on a pretty cool idea: Rather than my computer negotiating a connection with every site I want to connect to, my computer negotiates a connection with Orangatango, and Orangatango does the rest. To the outside world, it looks as though Orangatango is making all of the requests. Maybe it's not a unique idea, but they have implemented it extremely well.
Yeah, I know that I have to give them my credit card and that makes my connection ultimately traceable through one means or another, but it's a far cry better than surfing directly through my ISP.
They have additional benefits other than just the anonymization as well. It really is "the web on your terms" as Orangatango claims. They're worth a look! Check them out.
Before you ask, I'll answer that no, I am not affiliated with Orangatango. The only reason that I know about them is that I applied for a development position at Orangatango a year ago. I've kept my eye on them (as well as my browser pointed at them) ever since.
Re:Orangatango (Score:5, Funny)
Orangatango is based on a pretty cool idea: Rather than my computer negotiating a connection with every site I want to connect to, my computer negotiates a connection with Orangatango, and Orangatango does the rest. To the outside world, it looks as though Orangatango is making all of the requests. Maybe it's not a unique idea, but they have implemented it extremely well.
That's what us computery people call a Proxy [lycos.com], or Proxy Server ...
Paid Anonymizing is a Joke (Score:1, Flamebait)
Corporate Opression? Gimme a break! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Corporate Opression? Gimme a break! (Score:2, Insightful)
As a contractor, I often work at a client site, and often those sites have what I consider to be some excessive filtering/blocking rules. For example, at my current client, all web-based email accounts are blocked-- and contractors are not, as a general rule, given email accounts on the client's corporate domain.
Now, awareness of the dangers of email attachments is commendable, but I should also note that this same client standardizes on MS Outlook as an email client, and as such has twice been taken out by Nimda-- in spite of the blocking of services like Yahoo mail and Hotmail.
So, by using a proxy like Safeweb, am I subverting the client's security policies? Perhaps. But by blocking my email access somewhat arbitrarily, are they hindering my effectiveness as an outide contractor? Absolutely.
Who's right? Depends on who you ask. But, I believe that all concerned parties sometimes have motivations that are at least a little bit more complex than surfing porn on company time.
Fundamentalist oppression needs a break! (Score:5, Insightful)
So if all it means is that some rich Arabs can get easy access to porn, so what. It might just mean that someone from a religiously repressive and sexually repressed society learns that if you look at porn, it doesn't make you blind, it doesn't turn you into a rapist, and if your spouse/SO shares your tastes, it could even enhance your sex life. And the 5% of the time they were reading news sites might just give them a wider view of the world. All of which might make their country, eventually, more tolerant. So you can whine all you want, but sometimes the inability to surf porn is the man smacking people down, and sometimes the ability to surf porn is a sign that freedom exists, regardless of whether exercising that freedom at any given time is wise or tasteful.
Re:Corporate Opression? Gimme a break! (Score:2, Informative)
I'm one of the lucky few that manages one of these oppressive machines, and well, unfortunately we need them.
I hear a lot of whining about folks not being able to surf what they want. When we check our logs, we see that they are trying to get to p0rn, ESPN.com or spend company time looking for other jobs. We have had several sexual harrasment suits as a result of people being caught surfing p0rn, and no company wants to deal with that mess. Yes, I agree sometimes it does get in the way, but it's not that hard to open up sites as required.
After all you're at work to do that, work. Sure surfing makes lunch a little more enjoyable, but deal with it. This is an HR issue, take it up with them if you have a problem.
Re:Corporate Opression? Gimme a break! (Score:2)
Uh, because it's easier to hide it from the boss than from the wife?
Its called Economics, Stupid. (Score:4, Insightful)
TANSTAAFL
Oh the drama! (Score:2)
What a pile of crap! I understand invasion of privacy, but you are just paranoid!
Big brother is watching you, the illuminati can hear you through copper wires! If you are that paranoid, my friend, the best thing for you to do is move to siberia and become a hermit.
Quite frankly, no one is watching, and if they are (we're talking millions of transactions a second. Something no one would do for under $80k/year), you probably don't do anything that would attract their attention. Quit freaking out!
Re:Oh the drama! (Score:2)
If you are an American you can barely leave your house without being watched. There are cameras *everywhere* these days, many that you can't see, too.
And internet traffic? That's even easier to monitor, especially at corporations with proxy servers-- sure, most traffic is legitimate, but it's simple to route all traffic to mail.yahoo.com (or any other URL, or a URL containing specific strings, or even upon retrieving a web page to check it for certain keywords) to a standard 403 page-- or better yet, write that event out to a text file. Then when the employee gets a certain number of writes to that file, you look at what they've been up to and talk to their manager.
The real questions are more difficult. At what level do you allow workers the freedom to use the internet for personal stuff? What does it say about your workers if they intentionally bypass your legitimate security protocols (i.e. using SafeWeb, etc)? And are you better off firing such malcontents, or simply scaring them into submission in the first place?
Re:Oh the drama! (Score:2)
Since the use of company owned computers for company use is such a hard idea for spazdots to grok, here is a simple ananogy:
Joe: "I'm here to fix your computer."
Ichimunki: "It's in the den."
Joe: "Right. Remember, I charge $50 an hour."
Ichimunki: "That's okay just as long as you fix it."
...
two hours later in the den
...
Ichimunki: "What the hell are you doing?"
Joe: "Check out the tits on that momma!"
Ichimunki: "You're supposed to be fixing the computer, not jerking to pr0n!"
Joe: "Hey relax, I got the computer fixed an hour ago."
Ichimunki: "You can't use my stuff to surf SlutDot damn you!"
Joe: "Hey, it's my freedom. Don't oppress me. Here's my bill for two hours of work."
Re:Oh the drama! (Score:2)
Fantastic, now they will be after all of us, one by one we will be expired by seemingly natural causes.
It is just like when they
New Economy Gnomes... (Score:2)
Step 1. Provide a cool, useful service for free.
Step 2. ???
Step 3. Profit.
SSH to your house? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm surprised no one's mentioned this, since I've ben doingit forever. Anyone with broadband (cable/dsl) has a fast enough connection to simple SSH to their house, and forward ports over the conneciton. Thus, I have my web browser proxy set to 127.0.0.1:8000, whihc is forwarded to my home PC proxy over the SSH connection.
Re:SSH to your house? (Score:2)
Did you write the proxy yourself? If so, can you give a little help, or some pointers (or some code), or just a brief explanation of what you did? If not, where'd you get it?
Could something simple be written in PERL?
Now I'm really interested in trying this.
Re:SSH to your house? (Score:2)
Works well.
Re:SSH to your house? (Score:2)
All I do is turn on the proxy server for apache, and use that (see the manpage for details). Squid would work just as well, only reason I don't use that is I already have httpd. running. Then all you do is forward some local port (I use 8000, you could use anything) to the remote proxy port (80 for apache, 3128 for squid, etc). Then change your browser's proxy to 127.0.0.1:<port you chose>, and you're done.
I'd recomend using an SSH client that supports compression as well (I use Terraterm/SSH in windows) and turn the compression to around 5. That will speed up the latency of the connection between your house and your office.
Re:SSH to your house? (Score:2)
According to my sshd version (2.9p2), the -D option is to specify sshd to not detach. From the manpage:
-D When this option is specified sshd will not detach and does notbecome a daemon. This allows easy monitoring of sshd.
Perhaps you are running a different version? Regardless, I don't see how this is any simply than simply forwarding port 8000.
sshd -p443 (Score:2)
This is only valid if ssh is allowed from the site your trying to escape.
Then set up an SSH server listening on port 443 on the machine you want to send to, and tunnel through your proxy as if you were doing an SSL connection. Works fine for me, though YMMV depending on the fascistness of your sysadmin. Ugly source code here [achurch.org] for anyone interested.
Those were the good old days... (Score:2, Funny)
www.anonymizer.com?url=barely18.com
www.anonymizer.com?url=teenvixens.com
you could set up your own proxy (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess without these types of services people will have to learn how to protect themselves on the web. Besides how long do you think many of these services can stay free on the web? I'm kinds supprised /. has not talked about charging to post yet....
Corporate Oppression? (Score:2)
Let's put things in perspective. The women forced to wear bhurkas in Afghanistan are oppressed. The dissidents in the Gulag were oppressed. The Jews in the ghetto were oppressed. The African-americans forced into slavery two centuries ago were oppressed. You are not oppressed merely because you don't get automatic anonymity when you choose to disclose your public information to a corporation.
Re:Corporate Oppression? (Score:2)
In any event, the oppression of slaves is in no way comparable to the oppression one receives at the hands of our corporate masters when they fail to offer us free anonymizer services.
I tried to buy the whole thing. (Score:2)
Telling event: They wrote back declining the offer.
That's when I knew they were doomed.
--Blair
Anonymous browsing helps law enforcement (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:R.I.P. (Score:2)
(All Python code, too, as are maps.yahoo.com and mail.yahoo.com)
Sumner
Re:Hushmail and the law in the Republic of Ireland (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:An example (Score:2)
But what the hell does this have to do with corporate oppression as it relates to "anonymous internet services"?
In case you haven't noticed... (Score:2)
Perhaps those of us in supposedly "free" countries need anonymizing services now more than ever!
No. Libertarians are on the TOP wing. (Score:2)
on the scale of politics, libertarians are very far on the "right wing"
Wrong. Economically, libertarians are right-wing, but socially, they're left-wing. Libertarians place themselves on the top wing, the other wings being left (liberal), right (conservative), and bottom (authoritarian). Where do you fall? [lp.org]