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Ars Technica citation.
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'''Flash proxy''' is a pluggable transport and [[Proxy server|proxy]] which runs in a [[web browser]]. Flash proxies are an [[Internet censorship]] circumvention tool which enables users to connect to the [[Tor (anonymity network)|Tor anonymity network]] (amongst others) via a plethora of ephemeral browser-based proxy relays. The essential idea is that the [[IPaddress]]es contingently used are changed faster than a censoring agency can detect, track, and block them. The Tor traffic is wrapped in a [[WebSocket]] format and disguised it with an [[XOR cipher]].<ref>http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2014/08/a-portable-router-that-conceals-your-internet-traffic/</ref> |
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==Implementation== |
==Implementation== |
Flash proxy is a pluggable transport and proxy which runs in a web browser. Flash proxies are an Internet censorship circumvention tool which enables users to connect to the Tor anonymity network (amongst others) via a plethora of ephemeral browser-based proxy relays. The essential idea is that the IP addresses contingently used are changed faster than a censoring agency can detect, track, and block them. The Tor traffic is wrapped in a WebSocket format and disguised it with an XOR cipher.[1]
Afree software[2] implementation of flash proxies is available. It uses Javascript, WebSocket, and a Python implementation of the obfsproxy protocol,[3] and was crafted by the Security Project in Computer Security at Stanford University.[4] This work was supported by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) and the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific under Contract No. N66001-11-C-4022.[citation needed]