"The Orville". S1 E7. "Majority Rule"Crew visits planet where justice is by vote.
On Fri, Nov 3, 2017 at 2:39 PM, jim bell <jdb10987@yahoo.com> wrote:
"The Orville". S1 E7. "Majority Rule" Crew visits planet where justice is by vote [and crew is subjected to it].
http://uj3wazyk5u4hnvtk.onion/search/orville+s01e07/0/99/0 infohash: EC71506ED9D0F2A9189AB30EB110AD18F999827E Use of foreign VPN / other isolation methods of course.
Someone asked how to access onion sites... Links to '.onion's are part of the Tor overlay network, therefore you need Tor to reach them. Simplest way is to download and use the 'Tor Browser' from here... https://www.torproject.org/ Browsing around with that may be safe / private / anonymous for normal boring things like reading CNN.com news, and reading non controversial and completely legal sites in onionland, such as some of the forums, social networks, code repositories, etc. Even that is littered with caveats. Note that while it is possible to browse that site with Tor Browser, it is not possible to use Tor Browser to download the stuff that is listed there. Doing that requires additional tools for torrenting. And using those tools is risky for new users because they are complex to get plugged into Tor and properly tested and secured, which can then leak out to clearnet. Thus users can get busted for filesharing with the torrent protocol, even for what they might think was just downloading, over what they though was the Tor network. Also, Tor Browser for Windows and Linux are likely to be more developed than for Mac, and surely more than Android. I2P is another popular overlay network. It has a torrent network and client built internally into it, so may be a safer alternative to trying to use Tor for torrenting. I2P can be slow and use a ton of RAM / CPU. https://geti2p.net/en/docs/applications/supported#file-sharing http://127.0.0.1:7657/i2psnark/ Don't know what people do or don't know tech or otherwise, so advice is always to remain legal, be safe, and don't say / post / send / do anything they wouldn't do in public. And seek computer help preferably locally in person from knowledgeable trusted people. Of course Juan will chime in swinging his perfectly fine ragehammer opinion on at least Tor and anyone who mentions it. And fine VPN info links have been posted by Mirimir before. Besides, even youtube has the basic shit like TV shows... https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=orville+s1+e7
On 11/03/2017 08:22 PM, grarpamp wrote:
Someone asked how to access onion sites...
Links to '.onion's are part of the Tor overlay network, therefore you need Tor to reach them. Simplest way is to download and use the 'Tor Browser' from here... https://www.torproject.org/
[...]
I2P is another popular overlay network. It has a torrent network and client built internally into it, so may be a safer alternative to trying to use Tor for torrenting. I2P can be slow and use a ton of RAM / CPU.
https://geti2p.net/en/docs/applications/supported#file-sharing http://127.0.0.1:7657/i2psnark/
Torrent distribution on the "fire and forget" plan is the principal application for i2p, although it also has some forums, an in-network e-mail equivalent, and the router package comes with a ready to run web server. To date I have found i2p "slow" compared to running around the world naked all the time, but more than adequate for its intended purposes. In re RAM and CPU load, I usually run i2p on old, salvaged machines and rarely notice any performance hit when running other applications on them. On "good" machines I see no performance hits at all. Another thing I notice about i2p is that very few actual idiots are on that network: Eternal September has not come to i2p and probably won't for a long time. Back when I was playing with Freenet a few years ago, it really needed a machine of its own to run on: No amount of tuning it, or tweaking the Java engine made much difference in its absurd resource-hog ways. The publicly accessible fora and etc. in Freenet space seemed to be jam packed with the kind of guise who used to wear trench coats to grimy little movie houses in the middle of summer. I think of Freenet as something that might find practical use as a distributed file dump and etc. by groups who configure it to talk /only/ to other members of their team. None of the above has a large enough user base to present an adequate "anonymity set" (a.k.a. crowd to hide in) if one has any concerns about attention from the NSA and its partners and/or rivals.
participants (3)
-
grarpamp
-
jim bell
-
Steve Kinney