"Also keep in mind that there are no confirmed on the record cases to date of a Tor 'break/weakness' having been used to find a user. It appears to be only user error." One of the perdurable claims of comsec promoters is that comsec breaks and weaknesses inevitably turn out to be user errors. Exactly who the fictitious user is remains obscure but assuredly means somebody other than the comsec promoter user who inevitably offers a greatly improved product, trust them. Tor is especially adept at blaming users, itself faultless except for lack of volunteers to patch its innumerable holes (caused by clueless users), so much so one might think that is a feature derived from the religion of national security (actually that is its source and shows its heritage of exculpability) which inevitably fails due to lack of funding, political will, public support, unwillingness of youngsters to die for officer careers, that is customers must suffer for company profits. Has there been a better account of inevitable exculpability for inevitable comsec failure than that by NSA in 1998? <http://www.nsa.gov/research/_files/publications/inevitability.pdf>http://www.nsa.gov/research/_files/publications/inevitability.pdf Still hope continues -- thanks to Edward Snowden and his legions of inevitable comsec failure promoters: Cyber Security Market Forecast 2014-2024: Prospects For Leading Companies in Military, Government, Critical Infrastructure & Private Sector Protection Defence report Cyber attacks continue to dominate the headlines, and with good reason. While the threat of cyber security is often exaggerated, there is no doubt that the enhanced networking of society has created substantial vulnerabilities lurking within its interconnected pathways. With attackers able to strike from anywhere and inflict damage on a significant (but often unnoticed) scale, the threat has never been greater to the reams of knowledge held by governments and enterprise. There is also the threat to military information sharing networks representing a significant challenge: in an era of increased integration between systems and platforms, the very webs which act as force multipliers could collapse. Efforts to counter these extensive vulnerabilities are presently ongoing to an impressive degree, and the speed of these developments is not expected to lessen unduly. As a consequence, visiongain has assessed that the value of the global Cyber Security market in 2014 will reach $76.68bn. Why you should buy Cyber Security Market Forecast 2014-2024: Prospects For Leading Companies in Military, Government, Critical Infrastructure & Private Sector Protection