Neowin: New OnionShare 2.2 update makes it easy to share files and host sites on the Tor network

jim bell jdb10987 at yahoo.com
Mon Oct 21 11:13:39 PDT 2019


 

    On Monday, October 21, 2019, 04:10:23 AM PDT, grarpamp <grarpamp at gmail.com> wrote:  
 
 On 10/17/19, jim bell <jdb10987 at yahoo.com> wrote:
> >  Okay, I'm not advocating (or opposing) this concept.  It just seemed to me
> >that since we are talking TOR-related features, we should pay attention to
>> what TOR currently claims to provide.
>> I think a few months ago, I mentioned the idea (which I assume somebody else
>> thought of first, probably years ago) of splitting a file into two (or
>> more?) pieces, stored in two (or more?) separate systems), which when XOR'd
>> together, provide the (forbidden, banned, 'reallybad!!!' 'highly-illegal')
>> product file.  Neither file, alone, would be 'forbidden'.
>> The purpose of this is not 'secrecy' of course, but merely deniability.
>> Without the other file(s), the one file _I_ possess will be
>> indistinguishable from a random number.  In fact, it could be a random
>> number, which when XOR'd with a forbidden text, becomes what amounts to
>> another random number, and somebody else's system will hold the other
>> 'random number'  .  Think Vernam cipher, otherwise known as a "one-time
>> pad".  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-time_pad


>See the related...

>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OFFSystem

Yup.  Sounds like it,    Remember, 'deniability', not 'secrecy'.  
              Jim Bell  
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