AnonTechie writes "The Tor Foundation is moving forward with a plan to provide its own instant messaging service called the Tor Instant Messaging Bundle". The tool will allow people to communicate in real time while preserving anonymity by using chat servers concealed within Tor's hidden network. In planning since last July as news of the National Security Agency's broad surveillance of instant messaging traffic emerged the Tor Instant Messaging Bundle (TIMB) should be available in experimental builds by the end of March, based on a roadmap published in conjunction with the Tor Project's Winter Dev meeting in Iceland.
TIMB will connect to instant messaging servers configured as Tor "hidden services" as well as to commercial IM services on the open Internet."
(Score: 5, Interesting) by epitaxial on Sunday March 02 2014, @04:12PM
I don't trust TOR because firstly it was funded by the US government. Secondly a version with a vulnerable version of Firefox was released to bust that kiddie porn ring. Was that build of Firefox bundled intentionally by someone?
(Score: 2, Informative) by e on Sunday March 02 2014, @05:07PM
What? No. Nothing about "Secondly a version with a vulnerable version of Firefox was released to bust that kiddie porn ring. Was that build of Firefox bundled intentionally by someone?" makes any sense. There was at one point a version of the Tor Browser Bundle that people downloaded. Then it was updated, because a vulnerability was found in Firefox. Some people didn't upgrade their browser bundle (even though it warns every time you use it, when it's out of date), and those non-upgraded versions were exploited some time (over a month) after the update became available.
(Score: 1) by epitaxial on Sunday March 02 2014, @09:29PM
Wasn't the build of Firefox included in the Tor bundle already old when it was released?
(Score: 2) by Angry Jesus on Sunday March 02 2014, @10:36PM
It was an extended support release [mozilla.org] as would be appropriate for an embedded application like the Tor bundle.