yes. you'll need to use a different connection to register. then you can go back to tor.Is it prohibited to register if using the Tor Browser?
regards
alasdair
yes. you'll need to use a different connection to register. then you can go back to tor.Is it prohibited to register if using the Tor Browser?
those of you signing into bl on tor, i hope you realize that anyone running an exit node can sniff your username and password to this site and take over your account - this goes for any site that requires signing into (outside of hidden services, in which case your traffic doesn't need to be dumped out to the regular internet via an exit node).
But this is true only because you can't log into bluelight over https. It would also be true to say that if you use bluelight over a public WiFi network, anyone on that network who is sniffing traffic could find out your username/password. Of if you're at work and using bluelight, a network admin sniffing traffic could find that data out. And, though this scenario is less likely, if you're on your home network, someone (maybe a bitter employee of an ISP?) with control of one of the internet hops between your computer and the bluelight server could be packet sniffing and also get the plain text login credentials.
So the really important question here is .... why can't you log into bluelight over a secure connection??? I mean, come on, SoundCloud is over https now, for crying out loud.
Also, for people saying that you can register over the clear net and then log in over Tor, you have to realize that this defeats the whole purpose of using Tor, unless the registration comes from an IP that somehow isn't associated with you.
the chances of that happening are, well, you'll have to decide for yourself what the chances are.I wouldn't want someone to get my username n password.
couldn't happen? that's incorrect. how likely is it? i refer you to my previous answerI thought it was secure here n that this couldn't happen?
pretty much.Is that why other sites begin https not http, to make more secure?