On Fri, 2013-10-11 at 21:45 +0200, Moritz Bartl wrote: > On 10/11/2013 08:32 PM, Rhona Mahony wrote: > > Friend J doesn't want to install a Tor Browser Bundle on each of the 50 > > computers in his company. Can he install one TBB on his router and > > configure it so that it sends his employees' browser traffic through the > > Tor network? Is it advisable? Where are instructions? So sorry that I > > couldn't find them. Shall I persuade him instead to do the 50 > > installations of TBB? > > The problem is that you really want everyone to be using the Tor > Browser. While you can centralize Tor itself, there is currently no > support for an "external Tor" in Tor Browser. > > Also, an attacker in the internal network could see the traffic from > your application(s) to Tor. > > All in all, it is better to roll out TBB on all clients. With 50 > machines, the company should have a way to easily distribute the TBB > archive plus a shortcut anyway. They should also think about an update > strategy. > > -- > Moritz Bartl > https://www.torservers.net/ I do not think that 50 TBB would be better than the solution proposed by Griffin! If all machines are accessing the internet though one gateway or a couple of them, it makes more sense to have tor node running on those gates and directing the internal machines traffic to tor socks host/port. Security of data transit on the inside should be deployed by means of public/private key pair encryption between internal machines and gateway. -- Do not forget that we are cattle on an animal farm which is managed and handled mostly by machines. Machines do what they are/were told to. What lies in between stdin and stdout and is not shown in stderr? GPG: 0x48BE63E6
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