a great post that was published a few years ago on Matt Traudt’s blog with some tips for people using Tor and the Tor Browser.

it also addresses common misconceptions like disabling JS and using fingerprinting tests, which unfortunately I see floating around every other day on the internet.

  • @TheAnonymouseJokerM
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    -22 years ago

    I use I2P Java client, but you can use I2PD C++ client as well.

    • @kixik
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      12 years ago

      ohh, so I can use any torrent client (rtorrent for example), as long as I only use i2p sort of trackers, or so I understand from your post, and also from the wiki, perhaps specifying the binding address and port, or something like that…

      • @TheAnonymouseJokerM
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        -32 years ago

        I only know of BiglyBT that works with I2P, never tried rTorrent with I2P trackers. I just use the in-browser torrent client whenI need to once in a few months. Sorry if I cannot help here, you might need to hunt some documentation or wiki for I2P port binding.

        • @kixik
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          12 years ago

          Don’t worry, I checked on BiglyBT before. It does the dual function, it does hook to i2p trackers, which are special, and can as well hook to clear internet trackers, and whatever is being downloaded can be shared and exposed on both. It’s a specialized i2p torrent client, like vuze.

          That’s what I was trying to avoid using, :( I’m looking to see if I could use any torrent client, and just tunnel its traffic into the i2p router, like if it were a VPN or ssh tunnel. But so far, it seems you need a specialized torrent client, which can connect as a minimum, to i2p trackers, and use the different i2p file sharing protocols…

          If I’m mistaken, let me know, but it seems that’s the only way. At least what I’ve read. Oh well, dI don’t trust VPNs, and I don’t like the idea of using something I don’t trust, unless forced to do it…

          Thanks a lot !