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No, that post is from 2004. Failboat has sailed.
Hey, you're back!
Hi, how have you been?![]()
True, but it's trivially easy to change the user agent string, at least in Firefox. Panopticlick now reports my user agent as "Googlebot/2.1 (+http://www.googlebot.com/bot.html)"
Which is only part of the fingerprinting model. To an uninitiated user, tor by itself is useless.

Yeah, you're right. I'll get back to working on my browser plugin details and system fonts![]()
Which is only part of the fingerprinting model. To an uninitiated user, tor by itself is useless.
Unless you swipe a machine your IP is logged, I would think. No that would be assigned on the fly. But your machine ID?
I was thinking about this yesterday when they were talking about that horror chick that cut the baby from it's mother. Evidentially they tracked her thru a chat room and nabbed her in 23 hours. All via the Internet, or so they said.
If you use a chain of proxies I don't see how it will be possible to follow the track. No court order will be appliquable to all elements of the chain. And of course it takes only ONE of the member of the chain to delete their log, for anonymity to be assured.
nimzo
Yes for online browsing, but usable for sending an anonymous email for example.connection would be unreliable and slower than mud though.
But isn't this defeated by some simple measures? I turned off Javascript and most of their fingerprint data was not measurable anymore. Turn off cookies also and you're only left with the User_Agent string and the HTTP_ACCEPT header. You can tweak the first - set it to Googlebot, or set it to IE8 to get a meaningless value. For the second, don't set any language preferences other than English and it's meaningless too. So it's not like rocket science - OK, granny won't grasp this but the average power user raised in the internet age understands it. As you don't want to surf the net all the time with those settings you use another browser than your standard browser for anonymous browsing.