‘Using Tor is a civic act’: A beginner’s guide to the privacy browser – Technical.ly Philly

Browsers are our window into the virtual world.

So often though, we forget that just as we are looking outward, companies are looking inward. Every search we perform is logged and tied to our virtual footprint (and amongst other things, our geographic location). Search surveillance consequences span from differential pricing (like a higher online price if your browser denotes your location as affluent) to the inability for people to access sensitive information in countries with strict censorship laws (countries, for example, restricting access to sites about AIDS). Access to the amount and kinds of information internet architecture provides is unprecedented, and we are only beginning to understand the implications.

This is where The Onion Router (Tor) comes in. The Tor browser obscures any personal ties and information (with a few exceptions) associated with your browsinghistory. When you use Tor, instead of your request going straight from your browser to the site (like from my DuckDuckGosearch right to technical.ly/philly),it reroutes through several different countries. When using Tor, my request then might go through Norway and Germany before reaching technical.ly/philly. You might imagine that when using Tor, you are not only putting shades on your window but also removing your house from the map or Streetview entirely.

The overall strategy of Tor is that the more people who use it, the stronger of a tool it is. For activist and West Philly-based Tor Communications DirectorKatie Krauss, using Tor is not just switching a browser.

Using the Tor browser is a civic act it allows you to protect your right to privacy, and at the same time it helps human rights activists in countries like Iran or China to use the Internet without getting a knock on the door, she said.

The Tor Project also has Philly roots, as cofounder and research director Roger Dingledine used to be a visiting professor at Drexel.

Below are screenshots and some narrative about my experience downloading and using Tor.

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When logging on to Facebook and Gmail, Tor wouldnt have masked my identity (instead it would prevent certain kinds of advertising and tracking). However, both Facebook and Gmail gave me error messages.

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Unfortunately, this was to no avail. Facebook was alerting me that my account was likely compromised, because my last shown login was from Colombia. After attempting verification steps, I was locked out of both of my accounts.

I contacted Krauss to see if this was typical or Tor-related. She gave me the Facebook loophole: The way to avoid this with Facebook is to use their onion address (put this into the address bar on the Tor browser and it will take you to Facebook): https://facebookcorewwwi.onion/.For more info, she directed me to this Facebook blog post.

Krauss noted that she and several other users she checked with have no problem with Gmail in the Tor browser, though it is possible that the issue was the Tor-Gmail interface.

In the end, it worked for me: I was locked out of Gmail for about 3 hours, but after attempting again, I was able to sign in (though I had to verify with an extra step). While it was frustrating to be locked out of my email for a bit, the experience drove home for me how location dependent verification is (and the potential consequences of such dependence).

Overall, Tor was easy to implement and the inconvenience of switching browser was worth the benefit.Ive since relapsed since I first used it because its faster to go log on in Chrome and I need Google Hangouts for work (I havent been able to use it on Tor) but I am back on Tor now.

As I was browsing and watching the latest news, the onion metaphor made me beyond the technical aspect of Tor: if we imagine that those whose civil rights are most vulnerable are in the center, we can effect change by layering around them even with as simple an act of a browser change.

Jen Rajchel explores the intersection between the humanities and technology. A transplant from Las Vegas, she is a Bryn Mawr grad who has made the Philly suburbs her home.

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'Using Tor is a civic act': A beginner's guide to the privacy browser - Technical.ly Philly

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