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Censorship Digital Piracy

KickassTorrents Enters The Dark Web, Adds Official Tor Address 44

An anonymous reader writes: KickassTorrents has now added a dark web address to make it easier for users to bypass blockades installed by Internet Service Providers (ISPs). It has announced a new .onion domain through which KickassTorrents users can access their favourite sites on a Tor (The Onion Router) network. "Good news for those who have difficulties accessing KAT due to the site block in their country, now you can always access KAT via this address lsuzvpko6w6hzpnn.onion on a Tor network," announced a member of the KickassTorrents team.
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KickassTorrents Enters The Dark Web, Adds Official Tor Address

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    lsuzvpko6w6hzpnn.onion

  • It's not so "dark" anymore, is it? Besides, Tor still doesn't blend. It will be trivial to shut it down also if/when usage passes a certain tipping point and becomes a significant portion of internet traffic. What follows will be interesting.

    • There are plenty of other darknets out there, some are better than Tor for certain applications (for example, I2P doesn't get choked up by torrents) and are harder to block. Tor is just the most popular and well-established.

      • Still, nothing is invisible to your service provider. They still have control of what will pass over the network.

        • Still, nothing is invisible to your service provider. They still have control of what will pass over the network.

          True, but the FCC has declared them to be "utility" companies, just like water and sewage service. That adds a huge regulatory umbrella over them.

          It is probably why Verizon and AT&T are selling off all of their fiber (physical connections), at least in three cities so far. They're betting on wireless service to the home, which could get them out from under that umbrella.

          Whatever the reason, Frontier(TM), who took over my local FiOS, actually care about their customers. They have always been a utility

        • by JesseMcDonald ( 536341 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @03:36PM (#52277151) Homepage

          Still, nothing is invisible to your service provider.

          Tor traffic isn't "invisible" to your ISP, but it is opaque. The ISP can see that you're running a Tor node, and estimate roughly how much data is being transferred, but not who you're communicating with or what you're saying. The content being transferred over Tor is effectively invisible.

          • The ISP can see that you're running a Tor node...

            Exactly, and they can drop the packets, and anything else they decide to block.

            • Traffic between you and the Tor node can be trivially disguised as a https or ssh stream. For an attacker with a limited view of the network (ie, an ISP but not the government), there's no way to tell https-in-tor-in-https from just regular https, and plenty other usage patterns are indistinguishable as well.

              • I'm sorry, but they can redirect the signal without a care in the world about the content. And the government can conveniently place their equipment at the ISP, or set up phony ISPs. As long we are dependent on their service we are at their mercy. Ad hoc networking is our only hope. Everything else is too easy to sabotage and is just too brittle.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        you are not supossed to be using tor to download torrents, the whole content, the idea is to access the site in tor in case some faggot blocks it, grab the tiny .torrent file, and that will never make tor choke because its so tiny, and then run it from your regular internet without tor enabled.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          WROOOOONG!
          The WHOLE POINT is to give back the bandwidth you use (modulo 7 hops) to the network by running a non-exit relay.
          Then you can seed and share 24x7x365 with complete and utter impunity, freedom and happiness...
          ENTIRELY WITHIN the Tor network. NO exits. NO spies. NO VPNs needed.

        • by allo ( 1728082 )

          That's a misunderstanding. Downloading torrents is fine and even a good purpose.

          Torrenting via tor once you have the torrent may be a problem (but capacity is growing and the exits are the bottleneck)

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