Talk:Anonymous remailer

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Unclear humor

Matt, The Fredonia reference was deliberately constructed for humorous purposes. Both Fredonia and Firefly are from a Marx brothers movie.

Your objection was to... The humour? An editorial comment on the quality of the humour? What? --ww 19:03, 20 Apr 2004 (UTC)

:More that it would likely confuse as many as it would amuse; I didn't understand the reference, and a quick look revealed that it was likely that quite a few other readers wouldn't either (from a 1933 movie?). I thought about trying to refactor the example without the cultural reference, but then it occurred to me that it was a fairly straightforward and obvious point that might not need an accompanying anecodate anyway. -- — Matt 19:28, 20 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Removed content

I removed this text:

A Mixmaster remailer allows receivers to answer messages. To receive an answer to your message, you have to create encrypted reply blocks. A reply block contains instructions to reach your real address.

The text although true, is misleading because Cypherpunk remailers also offer reply via reply blocks. That is how nym servers work.

Is "Type IV" really used?

Can anybody source the claim that pseudonymous remailers are called "Type IV?" Google has no hits for "Type IV remailer", "type 4 remailer", or "type four remailer" (all with quotes). As near as I can tell, if anybody uses the term, it doesn't have general acceptance. Am I wrong? --Victor Lighthill 23:19, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

Victor I believe you are correct. I do not know of a type IV remailers. I changed the designation to type IV because it was previously described as Type III and I knew Mixminion was type III. I left the designation in because I thought someone may have known something I didn't. I think the pseudonymous remailers should be moved to a different designation outside of the Type X list. --User:rearden9

Remailer Vulnerabilities

Hi. Aren't the results of RProcess' [http://www.freehaven.net/anonbib/cache/rprocess.html analysis] worth mentioning with a few phrases, in addition to offering the link?

My English might, though, not suffice to do it properly, myself. TY.--84.56.81.23 07:56, 3 July 2007 (UTC)

Letter service

Is there any way to include the analog equivalent in the article? Is it dealt with elsewhere? --Daniel C. Boyer (talk) 20:45, 27 July 2008 (UTC)

What is the relationship? Is there a historical tie to snail-mail remailers from email remailers? The article expands, through its "See Also" section, and through its categorization, more in the direction of anonymity over computer networks. There should be, I think, a stronger connection between the topics than a similarity purpose you suggest. -- Mwatts15 (talk) 12:28, 18 March 2015 (UTC)

License violation

The site 'information.is-the-coolest.com' is reproducing Wikipedia content without attribution, including this page -- see http://www.information.is-the-coolest.com/index.asp@q=Anonymous_remailer -- in order to serve ads.

:That page doesn't seem to be up for me. Anyway, WP:FORK is the page you want. --Gwern (contribs) 17:05 27 June 2009 (GMT)

Realworld remailer

Is there any article on a physical/real-world analogue to anonymous remailers? I didn't see any, and they seem like they'd be useful enough services that someone would be running one (although maybe the legal issues would kill any such service). --Gwern (contribs) 07:51 12 August 2009 (GMT)

Assistance requested

I added a short section about 'abuse' of remailers. I would appreciate expansion of this section by a Wikipedian with access to the relevant law enforcment or legal sources. Sfan00 IMG (talk) 14:09, 31 October 2012 (UTC)

I changed the following.

I changed the following- However, since most users of e-mail do not have very much technical expertise, the full headers are usually suppressed by mail reading software. Thus, many users have never seen one. I changed it to read Occasionally the full headers are usually suppressed by mail reading software.

I'm sorry but the statement- since most users of e-mail do not have very much technical expertise, is an assumption,as is stating many users have never seen one. 98.240.76.78 (talk) 21:31, 26 March 2014 (UTC)

YAMN and Mixminion remailer

The YAMN remailer network is existing and working. I do not know why this reference has been removed. It is easier to delete something than to inform one self to adapt something written by a newcomer to the rules of Wikipedia. People who act as sheriffs in Wikipedia should have knowledge of the things they are deleting. In this case they do not have any knowledge about remailer. This is a quick and dirty solution. I don't think this is the spirit of Wikipedia.

The last maintenance of Mixminion program was about 10 years ago. The Mixminion network does not exists any longer. There is no evidence of this. But feel free to search for an existing Mixminion network in Google or similar search engine, you will not find anything. There is no evidence of this. But feel free to search for an existing Mixminion network in Google or similar search engine, you will not find anything. This temailer network does not exist any longer a lot of years. There is no evidence of this. But feel free to search for an existing Mixminion network in Google or similar search engine, you will not find anything. People who act as sheriffs should have knowledge of the things they are doing.

There are only three working remailer systems: Mixmaster, Cypherpunk and YAMN. Mixminion is dead for many years. If you want to inform yourself more about the remailer community I suggest that you read https://groups.google.com/g/alt.privacy.anon-server. Besides a lot of SPAM (unfortunately) you will find a lot of information here.

This was the first and last time that I improve or add information in Wikipedia. Now I understand why the number of editors in Wikipedia is decreasing.

This is my opinion freedom of speech, but I do not want to offend or attack anyone with it.

79.159.6.25 (talk) 23:52, 6 August 2021 (UTC)

Source + controversy

Found a great source for this article:

Mostyn, Michael M. (2000). The Need for Regulating Anonymous Remailers. International Review of Law, Computers & Technology, 14(1), 79–88. doi:10.1080/13600860054917

You can find the text on Sci-Hub. I've found this for Polish article (used it as reference) adding here as well, but only in form of a comment. jcubic (talk) 20:37, 6 May 2023 (UTC)

Evaluation needed in 2024

Good morning.

We need rather urgently an evaluation of the current technology and the one which is basically described in this article.

When obsolete facts are warmed up, there is more risk than gain. Reassure us, if you can. Not if not. ꟼsycho ㄈhi¢ken 😭 (talk) 06:02, 3 February 2024 (UTC)

:Yes, yes. Flags: dizum, faravahar, maatushka,danneberg,gabelmoo,longclaw ed c. Apologies for asking such a basic question but I'm having trouble finding a clear answer. I see a scattering of information from having a rummage around the 'net, but nothing that appears to describe how..?Know Someone Who Can Answer? 92.118.76.177 (talk) 04:08, 9 October 2024 (UTC)