Commit Graph

14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
sturm
380c126d1d bugfix update to mixmaster 2.9.1 2003-11-23 18:52:39 +00:00
sturm
f35e2a98d4 forgot to remove these, sigh. reminded by peter palfrader 2003-10-06 14:32:35 +00:00
sturm
2d63f62521 major cleanup, inspired by Peter Palfrader
- no more sgid _mixmaster
- no more global pool
- every user has his own pool/config in ~/.Mix, with
SYSCONFDIR/mixmaster/client.cfg providing a default configuration
- add sample script to fetch remailer keys/statistics
from Peter Palfrader <peter at palfrader dot org>
- remove WWW while here
- fix a bounds warning
- bump PKGNAME
2003-09-29 20:17:49 +00:00
sturm
5d94e73bb5 new user/group naming schema
bumped PKGNAME except for xcept
2003-06-22 10:05:28 +00:00
wilfried
745620cce4 POSIX chown, ok espie@ 2003-04-14 15:02:08 +00:00
sturm
ae7a86c644 update to 2.9.0
minor bugfixes

naddy@ OK
2002-12-25 16:48:12 +00:00
sturm
c539ea8fde set MAINTAINER to sturm@openbsd.org
naddy@ OK
2002-11-22 16:43:44 +00:00
naddy
9178c3d00c Update to 2.9b40: mainly minor bugfixes.
From: Nikolay Sturm <sturm@sec.informatik.tu-darmstadt.de>
2002-10-30 15:07:54 +00:00
naddy
543137a8a1 Update to 2.9b37.
From: Nikolay Sturm <sturm@sec.informatik.tu-darmstadt.de>
2002-09-14 15:21:14 +00:00
naddy
137e3a9d3a update maintainer address 2002-05-02 19:02:10 +00:00
espie
e82b62f79c Bump NEED_VERSION 2002-03-21 21:09:16 +00:00
espie
e3edfb9aea md5->distinfo 2002-03-21 20:20:41 +00:00
wilfried
2d83d0a949 NO_REGRESS, from maintainer 2001-10-31 20:09:18 +00:00
lebel
0d6bb217ba initial import of mixmaster-2.0.4b45:
--
This software comes in a client only configuration! If you want
to setup a mixmaster server, read through the example files,
man page and keep in mind, that the server stores all it's files
in $MIXPATH (/etc/mixmaster by default).

The purpose of anonymous remailers (hereafter simply remailers) is
to provide protection against traffic analysis. Traffic analysis
is the study of who you are communicating with, when, and how often.
This reveals more than you might expect about your activities. It
will indicate who your friends and colleagues are (and they can be
told apart by looking at the times you contact them). What your
interests are, from which catalog companies you contact, and which
ftp and WWW sites you visit. Traffic analysis can even reveal
business secrets, e.g. your frequent contact with a rival could
give hints of an impending merger.

Remailers protect your e-mail from traffic analysis. The original
remailers did this by removing all headers, except the subject line,
from any message you sent to them and then forwarding them a
destination of your choice. The recipient of such a message would
not know who had sent it.

The addition of encryption to this scheme gave significant protection
from attackers who simply look a the primary improvement with the
type 2 remailer Mixmaster.

WWW: http://mixmaster.shinn.net

Submitted by Nikolay Sturm <nikolay.sturm@desy.de>
2001-07-04 15:22:33 +00:00