Comment by supportengineer
Comment by supportengineer a day ago
Society benefits when people refrain from illegal and immoral activities.
Comment by supportengineer a day ago
Society benefits when people refrain from illegal and immoral activities.
I would assume very likely yes?
There definitely are legit use cases for it and in an ideal world, I think all traffic should go over onion routing by default to protect them.
But in reality today besides a handful of idealists (like me some years ago), and legitimate users, like protestors under oppressive regimes - I would assume the biggest group with a concrete interest to hide would be indeed pedophiles and other dark net members and therefore use it.
I'm pretty sure many people use Tor for other things than journalism and CP.
Tor is a privacy tool. Much of what we do in our lives is on the internet, and privacy is important. Tor helps people enjoy privacy in a medium that they are increasingly dependant on.
did your search button break? lmgtfy
https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=scare+quotes
this is a helpful answer, downvoting it would be extremely bad form
I have no idea who is using Tor other than that I heard it can be used by people requiring privacy from governments, e.g. whistleblowers. It also seems to have broad support from the tech industry so I'd be surprised if it was in fact primarily used for illegal or "immoral" purposes. That's why I'm asking.
Politicians and the powers-that-be benefit from slowly adding to the existing pile of what's considered illegal and immoral. They build that pile as a levee against threats to their power; to maintain the status quo.
Immoral is as subjective as it gets and is therefore an awful yardstick.