| > Honestly, I think it was clear. It wasn't. What were you suggesting? > In a very alpha stage version, sure. It has been like this for twenty-five years. I know this because I've been playing around with these tools for that long. That these tools just haven't got much better over the last *quarter century* suggests that either really solving the problem is effectively impossible, or that solving it isn't actually worth the effort, given that someone with a $2 pipe wrench can nearly always extract security-relevant encryption material from a knowledgeable insider. > I want something significantly closer to the 'normal' internet, but with a greater capacity for redundancy, privacy and anonymity. You need to learn how the Internet works. It is (and always has been) a federated, distributed system, even back when it was known as the ARPANET. These days, usually-larger-than-end-user (but not always) participants in the Internet run one or more Autonomous Systems, and negotiate connection agreements (often called "Peering" or "Transit" agreements) to interconnect their Autonomous Systems with others. You want privacy? Get service from operators that only interconnect with other operators that refuse to use their god-like powers of observation to deanonymize your traffic. |