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author | Nick <nick@somerandomnick.ano> | 2010-05-22 01:14:15 +0000 |
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committer | Nick <nick@somerandomnick.ano> | 2010-05-22 01:14:15 +0000 |
commit | 0bf5c8e2d549ca2ed2e92f0e213ae4f9953bc1d0 (patch) | |
tree | 2c93ab78ee1a929583e4c58a0a34e6f77776c9cd | |
parent | 6d2b3e86e6af4270c636e0bcdd3eb65133df9eee (diff) | |
download | resdb-0bf5c8e2d549ca2ed2e92f0e213ae4f9953bc1d0.tar.gz resdb-0bf5c8e2d549ca2ed2e92f0e213ae4f9953bc1d0.zip |
minor updates
-rw-r--r-- | doc/www.anonet2.org/public_pod/index.pod | 43 |
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/doc/www.anonet2.org/public_pod/index.pod b/doc/www.anonet2.org/public_pod/index.pod index 97f53c4..62cec83 100644 --- a/doc/www.anonet2.org/public_pod/index.pod +++ b/doc/www.anonet2.org/public_pod/index.pod @@ -35,9 +35,13 @@ reason with an inquisition against your peers. =item No centralized IRC control -No centralized IRC control: You don't have to worry about risc g-lining -you from the "official" IRC network for no apparent reason, and refusing -to even admit to having g-lined you. +No centralized IRC control: You don't have to worry about risc +g-lining you from the "official" IRC network for no apparent reason, +and refusing to even admit to having g-lined you. Since the whole +purpose behind AnoNet was to create a censorship-resistant alternative +to the government-censored "public" Internet, arbitrary censorship on +the "official" AnoNet IRC network by anonymous government members is +particularly troubling. =item No resource mess @@ -61,21 +65,24 @@ technical and administrative means. Joining is pretty simple: If you know how to connect to a client port, UFO's CP (L<http://ix.ucis.nl/clientport.php> or -L<http://www.qontrol.nl/anonet-cp.tgz>) will already land you in -the right place. (Once you're online, you can join "the club" at -1.3.3.7:6667 #anonet, or irc.somerandomnick.ano:6667 #RendezVous. If -you don't have an IRC client handy (or if you're too lazy to set -it up to avoid leaking your real info), you can just telnet over to -irc.somerandomnick.ano port 2323. Alternatively, you can point your -Jabber client over to irc.somerandomnick.ano, or you can even use Jabber -s2s to talk with everybody else by just joining the MUC room RendezVouz -at irc.somerandomnick.ano.) If OpenVPN is all Greek to you, UFO's IRC -server is also reachable from the public Internet (irc.kwaaknet.org port -6667 channel #anonet). If IRC is all Greek to you, you may want to talk -to your favorite search engine about that, or just use KwaakNet's Webchat -(L<http://webchat.kwaaknet.org/?c=AnoNet>). (Note that if your only aim in -joining AnoNet is to search Google anonymously, you can save yourself the -hassle by just heading over to Scroogle (L<http://www.scroogle.org/>).) +L<http://www.qontrol.nl/anonet-cp.tgz>) will already land you in the +right place. (Once you're online, you can join "the club" at 1.3.3.7:6667 +#anonet, or irc.somerandomnick.ano:6667 (1.0.27.103, if you don't have +DNS for some reason) #RendezVous. If you don't have an IRC client handy +(or if you're too lazy to set it up to avoid leaking your real info), you +can just telnet over to irc.somerandomnick.ano port 2323. Alternatively, +you can point your Jabber client over to irc.somerandomnick.ano, or +you can even use Jabber s2s to talk with everybody else by just joining +the MUC room RendezVouz at irc.somerandomnick.ano.) If OpenVPN is all +Greek to you, UFO's IRC server is also reachable from the public Internet +(irc.kwaaknet.org port 6667 channel #anonet). If IRC is all Greek to you, +you may want to talk to your favorite search engine about that, or just +use KwaakNet's Webchat (L<http://webchat.kwaaknet.org/?c=AnoNet>). (Note +that if your only aim in joining AnoNet is to search Google anonymously, +you can save yourself the hassle by just heading over to Scroogle +(L<http://www.scroogle.org/>). If you're looking to browse the rest of +the public Internet anonymously, though, we now have an outbound proxy, +which you're more than welcome to use.) =head2 Why to Join |