tor browser bundle - Can I exit from a specific country or node? - Tor . . . The following excerpts from the Tor Project Manual should tell you everything you need to know: ExitNodes node,node,… A list of identity fingerprints, nicknames, country codes and address patterns of nodes to use as exit node---that is, a node that delivers traffic for you outside the Tor network Note that if you list too few nodes here, or if you exclude too many exit nodes with
Does my ISP know what sites I have visited if I am using Tor? Additionally, since Tor encrypts your traffic your ISP can't see your HTTP requests, so they can't see what websites you're trying to download There's also the issue of stuff like DNS If you try to resolve a URL using DNS in the clear (without using Tor) then that reveals what websites you intend to visit
How to Install Tor browser through command line Now the Tor Browser is extracted into your "home" directory Open the "home" folder in a file-browser like Dolphin, go to the directory "~ tor-browser_en-US" and double click on the "start-tor-browser desktop" icon
windows - Tor Browser does not have permission to access the profile . . . The Tor Browser doesn't work this way It can run from any location (your home directory, an USB stick, etc ) Therefore the software is rather unpacked than installed When you start it, it creates several files in the directory where it is started The user who starts Tor Browser needs to have write permissions to this directory
tor browser bundle - Should I run Tor in a VM? - Tor Stack Exchange The Tor Browser Bundle already solves this for the included software (Tor, Firefox, Vidalia Bundle) To be more secure you should use a complete secured operating system with unified configuration so that you cannot be identified when versions of various parts of it get revealed Example of such OS is Tails
I am having trouble with starting tor service The Tor service is not the Tor Browser The Tor service "tor" is used for creating onion services, relays, and a socks5 proxy In the output that you gave, the service seems to be working perfectly: Bootstrapped 100% (done): Done The Tor Browser is what you want if you want to access the Tor network with a browser Download the browser: here
Proxy Client: unable to connect (general SOCKS server failure) The BridgeDB will send you some bridge addresses Within the Tor browser you click on the green onion and select the Tor network settings When you check "My ISP blocks connections …" a submenu will open and you can paste the bridge lines there Tor Browser will try to use the pluggable transport and you are able to use the net again
tor browser bundle - Windows Installation Location - Tor Stack Exchange Tor Browser Bundle doesn't change registry nor writes it to some system directory Therefore you can install (or, better, unpack) the software to any directory you want and run it from there The Tor developers chose Desktop, because it exists on every Windows installation and is easily accessible, I guess