Overview of all pages with the tag #Open Source, such as: 7ASecurity Completes Security Audit of Círculo| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Security, such as: IOCipher 1.0 community reboot| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Distribution, such as: Distribution in Depth: Mirrors as a Source of Resiliency| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Debian, such as: Debian over HTTPS| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Usability, such as: First Time Using CalyxOS Review| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Android, such as: IOCipher 1.0 community reboot| Guardian Project
IOCipher update to version 1.0 We are thrilled to announce that a community contributor has picked up maintaining a fork of IOCipher and updated to IOCipher 1.0, designed to enhance your development experience and empower you to create more secure applications with ease. Here’s what’s new and why it matters to you: 1. Enhanced Features We introduced a few new features. Most notably IOCipher is also available on Desktop Java for Linux and Windows now.| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Tor, such as: Arti, next-gen Tor on mobile| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Privacy, such as: 7ASecurity Completes Security Audit of Círculo| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Fdroid, such as: A Look Back at 2024: F-Droid's Progress and What’s Coming in 2025| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #F Droid, such as: A Look Back at 2024: F-Droid's Progress and What’s Coming in 2025| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Bazaar, such as: Building a Signing Server| Guardian Project
I received an interesting email that points to a new direction in targeting developers to exploit them. This email is a reply to a message that I actually wrote to an email list in 2012, that was posted on a public thread on a public list. It also uses the name of a person that posted on that thread: “Paul Eggers”. Oddly, it did not use that person’s actual email from the original thread.| Guardian Project
In this tutorial we’re going to talk about the best practices to browse the web securely on iOS using Onion Browser Release 2.6 and the Tor network. Onion Browser for iOS is a free, open-source web browser app developed originally by Mike Tigas, with Release 2.6 as a collaboration with the Guardian Project. Onion Browser has Tor built-in and uses Tor to protect your web activity. You can also watch the Onion Browser Video Tutorial on YouTube.| Guardian Project
NetCipher has been relatively quiet in recent years, because it kept on working, doing it was doing. Now, we have had some recent discoveries about the guts of Android that mean NetCipher is a lot easier to use on recent Android versions. On top of that, TLSv1.2 now reigns supreme and is basically everywhere, so it is time to turn TLSv1.0 and TLSv1.1 entirely off. A single method to enable proxying for the whole app As of Android 8.| Guardian Project
There is a new vulnerability in Debian’s apt that allows anything that can Man-in-the-Middle (MITM) your traffic to get root on your Debian/Ubuntu/etc boxes. Using encrypted connections for downloading updates, like HTTPS or Tor Onion Services, reduces this vulnerability to requiring root on the mirror server in order to exploit it. That is a drastic reduction in exposure. We have been pushing for this since 2014, and Debian, mirror operators, and others in the ecosystem have taken some big...| Guardian Project