Categories
Qubes OS

Qubes OS – Overview/Demo

Qubes OS is a security-focused desktop operating system that aims to provide security through isolation. Virtualization is performed by Xen, and user environments can be based on Fedora, Debian, Whonix, and Microsoft Windows, among other operating systems.

Learn more: https://www.qubes-os.org

Categories
Qubes OS

Qubes OS: Security Oriented OS

Learn more: https://www.qubes-os.org/

Categories
Qubes OS

Qubes OS: The OS That Can Protect You Even If You Get Hacked

Learn more: https://www.qubes-os.org/

Categories
Tails

Chat on Tails

Learn more: https://tails.boum.org/

Categories
Tails

Introduction to Tails

Learn more: https://tails.boum.org/

Categories
Tails

Getting Tails

Learn more: https://tails.boum.org/

Categories
Tails

Persistence on Tails

Learn more: https://tails.boum.org/

Categories
Whonix

Whonix

What is Whonix?

Whonix is software designed to preserve privacy and anonymity by helping users run applications anonymously. Whonix can be installed on Windows, macOS and Linux. Whonix also comes pre-installed in Qubes (Qubes-Whonix).

How does Whonix work?

To protect a user’s anonymity on the internet, all connections are forced through the Tor network and numerous security mechanisms are deployed.

What are the Advantages of Whonix?

Whonix realistically addresses common attack vectors.

An IP address is a label which is used to identify a computer on the Internet. A simple analogy is an IP address is similar to a car license plate.

Hiding IP addresses is technically difficult for software. There is always a risk of so-called IP leaks, whereby a user mistakenly thinks the IP address is hidden when it is actually not.

Whonix is the best solution to prevent IP leaks because it uses a more solid technical design. IP leak issues that previously applied to other software were not applicable to Whonix in a number of cases.

IP leaks are not the only issue that can break a user’s anonymity. Other threats include time attacks, keystroke deanonymization and data collection techniques. Whonix deploys numerous security mechanisms to mitigate such attacks.

How is Whonix different from a VPN?

Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) know your identity and online activity and can be compelled legally to share this information with authorities under various circumstances.

VPNs are usually faster than Tor, but they are not anonymity networks. VPN administrators can log both where a user is connecting from and the destination website, breaking anonymity in the process. Promises made by VPN operators are meaningless, since they cannot be verified. Tor provides anonymity by design rather than policy, making it impossible for a single point in the network to know both the origin and the destination of a connection. Anonymity by design provides much more security, since trust is removed from the equation.

Whonix isn’t a program like most of your applications. It’s a full operating system that runs inside your current one.

Learn more: https://www.whonix.org

Categories
Tor

Tor

Defend yourself against tracking and surveillance. Circumvent censorship

Everyone should be able to explore the internet with privacy. The Tor Project is a 501(c)(3) US nonprofit. They advance human rights and defend your privacy online through free software and open networks.

Block Trackers

Tor Browser isolates each website you visit so third-party trackers and ads can’t follow you. Any cookies automatically clear when you’re done browsing. So will your browsing history.

Defend Against Surveillance

Tor Browser prevents someone watching your connection from knowing what websites you visit. All anyone monitoring your browsing habits can see is that you’re using Tor.

Resist Fingerprinting

Tor Browser aims to make all users look the same, making it difficult for you to be fingerprinted based on your browser and device information.

Multi-Layered Encryption

Your traffic is relayed and encrypted three times as it passes over the Tor network. The network is comprised of thousands of volunteer-run servers known as Tor relays.

Browse Freely

With Tor Browser, you are free to access sites your home network may have blocked.

Learn more: https://www.torproject.org