>>1552 V3 services are cryptographically stronger than V2 services. V3 services use stronger, more modern crytpographic primitives than V2 services. It's significantly harder to impersonate a V3 service than it is to impersonate a V2 service.
>>1555 >isn't the connection already encrypted by tor?
Don't trust Tor just by itself. Tor is full of bluehairs and diversity niggers just like everything else in owpen sores.
Adding extra encryption isn't a bad thing.
>>1563 >Why should I be more careful than is absolutely necessary?
because EVERYTHING is botnet, EVERYTHING is CIA, and EVERYTHING is made by trannies. And you have to point it all out.
t. sarkeesian
>>1567 >imageboard tui client
why do you need to do any of that crap when you can just use a torsocks + (maybe patched) w3m + a mailcap file which uses convert/jp2a or dotmatrix to display images.
>>1551 >Your connection is not secure
>The owner of nanochancsvnej4vxiidu4fhpchkxffl3mgqypub63xadeetkjttavqd.onion has configured their website improperly. To protect your information from being stolen, Tor Browser has not connected to this website.
That's a yikes for me.
>>1606 >(((Tor Browser))) and (((Firefox))) kvetch about superior self signed certificates but not about (((CA Certificates))) which can be spoofed by (((outsiders))) <oof, yikes, just wow! can't connect to that!
I'm going to share the mnemonics I use to remember the v3 address. The domain is 62 characters long, but you probably already know that it starts with nanochan and ends with .onion so that means you already know over a fifth of the domain. There's only 48 other alphanumeric characters so that's easy peasy.
nanochan: The name of the site. You should already know this.
csv: It's like the file format.
nej: Nudge
4v: Like For You, but v comes after u in the alphabet
xii: 12 in roman numerals
du: The UNIX command for looking up filesizes in a directory
4f: Both 4 and f start with f
hp: Health Points / the company
chk x: Check X
ffl: Almost like FFI (foreign function interface), but with an l at the end.
3mgqy: 3 magpie, but the p is flipped horizontally
pub63: public server 63
xadeetkj: Almost sounds like a sentence if you pronounce like The deet KJ
tta: Easy to remember sequence
vqd: v quid
.onion: All hidden services end with this.
It would be great if others shared what they use to remember the domain. Remembering v3 address can get tricky because there are so many chunks. I'm sure with more practice I can increase my recall speed instead of pumping out a couple sequences at a time.
>>1636 So I can access this site from anywhere I have access to Tor. Plus you there's the fact that my brain is more secure than just storing it in the bookmarks toolbar. Also, memorizing v3 onions is hardcore and makes me more 1337.
>>1628 Yikes. I write important things down to a notebook dedicated to handling public key fingerprints of major projects (e.g. Tor Project, Debian, VeraCrypt) and full onion links. Though I'm also beginning to memorize these seemingly random sequences of base-16 numbers without actually spending any effort.
>Though I'm also beginning to memorize these seemingly random sequences
Memorization is a skill that you can improve like any other. The more practice the better you will be at it. Personally, I really need to get in the habit of reviewing stuff regularly. For me the hardest part is retaining it past a few days as I get distracted and don't review it so I forget parts of it. Luckily with stuff like onions I can try a couple variations and the speed I recall it doesn't matter.
Nanochan is now accessible through the v3 hidden service:
https://nanochancsvnej4vxiidu4fhpchkxffl3mgqypub63xadeetkjttavqd.onion
Thanks for waiting.