back when I used ubuntu derivatives I used privoxy and edited the config file to route all my traffic through tor.
I just did the same on debian 12.6 and wonder if there’s a better alternative.
You point your main active network interface gateway to a tor gateway or proxy.
You point your main active network interface gateway to a tor gateway or proxy.
Am I doing that editing the privoxy config file with this line?
‘forward-socks5t / 127.0.0.1:9050 .’
I now set up tor for firefox manually using https://www.wikihow.com/Use-Tor-with-Firefox. If the edited privoxy cofig file is the right way to go, didn’t I just double torify?
#Whonix is what you need, unless you find this solution too heavy
Install tor (from the official repo) then set up a proxy for SOCKS5 localhost port 9050
You may want to look into Qubes, it can natively route an entire OS through Tor. Note that routing all your traffic may hurt your anonymity. For example, there what if an app on your machine reaches out to somewhere and reports the serial number of a piece of hardware and it does it through your “anonymous” Tor connection? Virtualizing that hardware can help avoid that. Think through your threat model.
Someone else mentioned Qubes, but that is also a rather advanced distro for journalists and other users with a high threat model.
If you want to be able to use your computer as normal, but have a session with maximum privacy and route through Tor, Whonix is your best bet.
If you want something that you cannot possibly mess up, even at the cost of less functionality on your computer, TAILS is your best bet.
If you can, set this up on your router and then specify which devices should route through.
You may also want to use pihole for ad blogging and as your DNS server. and in pihole use your VPN server’s DNS such that you don’t have DNS leak.
And if the VPN is down, your computer won’t work until it comes back up.
Helpful if you run the network at your house
I don’t use tor that often but as my understanding tor is basically a socks5 proxy, which operates at application layer, so there is no way you can route all your traffic through tor, at least not the ICMP packets.
Some applications are willing to use your proxy settings like
http_proxy
andhttps_proxy
environment variables, but some of them not, especially for udp based applications (most games). The workaround that i am aware of is to use a rule-based proxy program that supports TUN mode, such as Clash Meta (the link is a fork of clash meta called mihomo, which is the one that i am currently using). Basically it creates a virtual interface and traps all the higher layer traffic into this interface, so it can route them through the configured proxy (tor in your case), even for applications that don’t honor your proxy settings at all.In Clash Meta you can use configurations such as this to route all your layer 5 and 4 traffic through tor, the important part is to enable the tun mode. After that you can simply use command
mihomo -f config.yaml
to start it.port: 7890 socks-port: 7891 redir-port: 7892 mode: rule tun: enable: true stack: gvisor auto-route: true auto-redirect: true auto-detect-interface: true proxies: - name: 'tor' type: socks5 server: localhost port: 9050 proxy-groups: - name: DEFAULT type: select proxies: - 'tor' rules: - MATCH,DEFAULT
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how does carburetor work? Do I simply activate it and that means all my traffic goes through tor? just like that? even if I open a terminal and sudo apt update, flatpak or yt-dlp something?
You run carburetor and use it has a proxy for your internet. Ie go to network settings and fill out the ports for your connections in proxy
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(Not directly answering your question but) if it works like a VPN service then yeah. However, P2P connections might not be routed through TOR in that case. Be careful about that