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Submission + - SPAM: A Third of All Dark Web Domains Are Now v3 Onion Sites

An anonymous reader writes: Throughout 2020 and 2021, the Tor anonymity network has gone through a major change as the Tor software team has released a new version of its software that updated how .onion domains look and work. More specifically, the Tor Project has done away with 16-character-long .onion domains, also known as v2 addresses, and replaced them with 56-character-long domains, known as v3. The move, driven by a need to improve the Tor network’s privacy, security, and resilience to deanonymization attacks, was announced years in advance, and the entire process took more than a year to complete:

But despite the Tor team’s best efforts to announce the move in advance, new numbers compiled and released by dark web monitoring company DarkOwl show that the Tor network is still made up in large part of servers running older v2 domains. “In the last six weeks, DarkOwl’s Vision platform has observed an average of 104,095 active .onion services across both address schemes of which: 62% are v2 addresses and 38% are v3 addresses,” the company said last week. DarkOwl says it detected a spike in new v3 domains in July 2021, which coincided with the Tor team adding a fullscreen warning before accessing v2 domains in preparation for the browser’s v11 release this fall. This resulted in more than 2,900 v3 domains being registered in the last two weeks of July alone. However, as the Tor team noted in its own v2-to-v3 analysis in September, the number of v3 domains is trending up.

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Comment VS Code integration (Score 1) 97

With a few Edge and VS Code feature integrations, remote development features, you've got pretty much got every paid web dev who is using Linux using this combo. Which will work well on Windows (handy, you running Office 365 in a browser is fairly painful and Teams on Linux is fairly sh*t). Sure you can create your own integration, but will you? You are a time poor web developer, not a web browser developer, not a VS Code developer, it works great, and at last your entire team can use the same desktop development technology. Click click. Maybe there were few ignored notices giving away your privacy when VS Code asked you to enable the integration, with a less obvious way to disable that data sharing (they told you how to disable that but did you forget?).

I suppose MS never stopped hurting from losing the old browser wars, and now they are back, armed and ready.

Comment Re: absolutely (Score 4, Informative) 328

This whole banning of straws thing is, frankly, absurd. If plastic straws are ending up in the ocean, the problem is littering... not the straws.

Evidentially, plastic straws (and many other plastics) are ending up in our environment in huge numbers, and having a large impact. Evidentially, we are doing a terrible job controlling littering. Its not absurd to remove the cause of a problem, it's the best thing you can do.

The Hierarchy of hazard controls has elimination as the most effective control. Asking people to stop littering is at the other end of the control spectrum.

Comment No wonder: 3 years of machine learning and nothing (Score 2) 129

I'm so glad a human might be listening when I am cursing the Google Assistant service. That makes me feel so much better, even if they are just probably laughing at me.

Frankly the service and it's capability is appalling and does not seem to be improving. It continually leaves me feeling frustrated and dis-empowered. Its not the actual voice recognition which seems to be the problem, rather the contextural application of that data, which they need to improve. Google must know this, yet they seem unable to deliver.

Three years of machine learning and the machine hasn't learned very much at all. Maybe the humans can help.

Comment Re: Demographics are bogus (Score 3, Interesting) 273

Same for Netflix. I find their recommendation system useless. At muliple conferences I have been to there have been references to how they track every movement and selection, use AI and big data, notice how far through a series or an episode I get, etc., for their recommendation system. Yet that recommendation system rarely shows me stuff I would actually like to watch. Mostly I read reviews in publications I like, or talk to my friends, to find things I want to watch.

Comment Re:Boy who cried wolf (Score 1) 240

Thanks, those links provide illuminating views from a variety of perspectives.The Forbes article on past espionage - it's author, Arthur Herman, his Hudson Institute, are interesting... Hong Kong Free Press makes raises some good points about CEO behavior, a different view point, again partisan. Seen the Guardian article previously. So I am swayed that "we should not trust Huawei, here, look at their past actions of espionage, and current actions and behavior of the executives, and we have some alternatives". But who can we trust?

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