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Freenet Releases 0.7.0rc2 53

evanbd writes "The Freenet Project has announced Freenet 0.7.0rc2. From the announcement: 'Freenet is a global peer-to-peer network designed to allow users to publish and consume information without fear of censorship. Freenet 0.7 is a ground-up rewrite of Freenet. The key user-facing feature in Freenet 0.7 is the ability to operate Freenet in a "darknet" mode, where your Freenet node will only talk to other Freenet users that you trust. This makes it much more difficult for an adversary to discover that you are using Freenet, let alone what you are doing with it. 0.7 also includes significant improvements to both security and performance.' Of course, for those of us who don't know anyone else running Freenet, or simply prefer it, there's also a non-darknet mode available."
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Freenet Releases 0.7.0rc2

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  • Yeah, but the question burning on everyone's minds is: is it stillas slow as pouring molasses outside in January in Michigan's Upper Peninsula?

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I'll have you know our molasses-pouring operations have gotten much more efficient in recent years, you insensitive clod!

      (which, ironically, may be the figurative answer to your question)
    • In a word: yes. I suspect this is as much to do with the lack of peers as anything in the program itself. I think that if enough of us are using it, it will be much better as more peers are added.

      I like the concept of this because it is about information being free; free of inspection by those who would search your home or ask for travel papers, and do so without legal authority or permission. Perhaps it might be thought of as Freedomnet. Sharing pics with the family, or organizing a group, say like anonymo
      • Remember, Freenet's really not that different from Bittorrent. How useful is Bittorrent when there's two peers serving some years-old file?
  • start your downloads.
    • start your downloads.

      New Freenet? "Here come the pedophiles!"

      New online chat system? "Here come the pedophiles!"

      New photo sharing site? "Here come the pedophiles!"

      Exactly how many damn pedophiles live in the hellhole where you reside? Has it ever occurred to you to try, you know, moving to someplace with a better normal:kiddielover ratio?

      I have excellent Karma and I am not afraid to Troll it.

      I can tell.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Give him a break, hes probably Britain. The country's filled with illegal immigrant terrorist paedophiles living in council houses. That's why we need more cameras. Pervasive surveillance is the answer to all of society's woes!
      • by Goaway ( 82658 ) on Friday April 25, 2008 @11:59AM (#23199614) Homepage

        Has it ever occurred to you to try, you know, moving to someplace with a better normal:kiddielover ratio?
        Someplace less like Freenet, in other words?
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by evanbd ( 210358 )

          Has it ever occurred to you to try, you know, moving to someplace with a better normal:kiddielover ratio?

          Someplace less like Freenet, in other words?

          There's plenty of abhorrent material on any P2P network. In my experience, Freenet is not particularly different, for better or for worse.

          What Freenet does have more than its fair share of are conspiracy theorists and related weirdos. But I count that as neither surprising nor particularly problematic.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Just Some Guy ( 3352 )

          Every six months or so I re-install Freenet to see if the performance has gotten any better. Every time, I look at each of the pre-configured index pages to see what people are posting these days. Not once - never - have I seen childporn in any of those indexes.

          There's a simple explanation for all the people who talk about how Freenet is saturated with kiddy porn: they're either repeating a stupid meme that they know nothing about, or they've gone looking and found something. Which group are you in?

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        Has it ever occurred to you to try, you know, moving to someplace with a better normal:kiddielover ratio?
        Which planet might that be?
  • Whats the advantages of using freenet vs using bittorrent?
    If your in darknet mode isnt that the same as a private tracker?
    If your not in darknet mode arnt you just as exposed as BT?

    If you want to carry out conversations, then i suppose BT isnt a good medium, But isnt that what public/private mailing lists are for?

    Im not saying Freenet is useless just asking how it compares.
    • by CSMatt ( 1175471 )

      If your in darknet mode isnt that the same as a private tracker?
      No, because malicious individuals can still sign up for private trackers. In darknets, no one, not even the person you are downloading from, knows who you are.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by mrogers ( 85392 )

      If your in darknet mode isnt that the same as a private tracker?

      Not really - with a private tracker, the other users (including the tracker) know what you're uploading and downloading. That's not the case in Freenet. Also, any user of a private tracker can invite their friends, who can also see what you're uploading and downloading, so the network becomes less private as it grows. Freenet becomes more private as it grows, because there are more users who might have initiated any given request.

      If your not

      • Another disadvantage of Tor is that even though your traffic is encrypted, it's easy for someone monitoring your network connection [wsj.com] to tell when you're using Tor. If they can correlate the times you connect to Tor with the times a certain webmail account is active then your anonymity is broken [freehaven.net]. By running a Freenet node 24/7 you make it much harder for an eavesdropper to link your activity patterns to anonymous or pseudonymous messages, because your node is always sending and receiving encrypted packets regardless of whether you're active.

        But if you can afford the bandwidth you can run a tor node. is running a Freenet node lighter on bandwidth?

        • by mrogers ( 85392 )
          Good point about running your own Tor node. Tor and Freenet both have configurable bandwidth limits, but if you're on a really slow connection I guess there comes a point where you're not contributing much value to the network...
        • by gwern ( 1017754 )
          In my experience doing both, Tor can eat up as much as you give it - which since the default limit is something like 100 kb/s with bursts up to 1000 means you'll be donating ~200 kb/s in my experience. Freenet on the other hand has a more generous cap, but I don't think I've ever seen it upload more than 30 or 40 kb/s, even with a few gigs in my store.
    • by Neil ( 7455 ) on Friday April 25, 2008 @11:32AM (#23199240) Homepage

      Bittorrent doesn't allow you to publish and download anonymously. If you are seeding something (or downloading it) everyone who is allowed to connect to the tracker can find out your IP address.

      A Freenet network ideally consists of a large number of nodes connected by sparse network of encrypted links. Many of the nodes have a big chunk of cache associated with them. The files in the network live in the caches. To request a file you ask your node to find a file with a specific hash signature. It passes the request to its peers in the network, they pass it on in turn, and hopefully it eventually it reaches a cache that has the file you asked for. Bits then start trickling back through the chain of caches. The important thing is that because your local node is an active part of the network and is sending and receiving stuff all the time, nobody knows whether a particular request or response that goes through your node relates to something that you asked for, or whether it is just something that you've been asked to "pass on" by a 3rd party.

      If everything works as intended, even people who are fully connected to the network and participating shouldn't be able to identify the original publisher of a particular file, or identify who has downloaded a copy (though the fact that they've added the darknet mode suggests that that they aren't 100% confident about that!).

      http://freenetproject.org/whatis.html [freenetproject.org]

      This has obvious anti-censorship, freedom of speech, freedom to whistle-blow type applications:

      http://freenetproject.org/philosophy.html [freenetproject.org]

      It also has obvious undesirable applications (see the flood comments about child-porn and terrorism).

      The other major practical difference to Bittorrent is that Bittorrent is designed to be fast. Freenet is definitely not the quickest way to get information from A to B ...

      • by evanbd ( 210358 )
        With or without the darknet mode, the anonymity is good but not 100%. Especially for large files (or groups of files) there are statistical attacks (eg, if I'm getting requests for a large fraction of file, I'm probably closer to the requester). They're nontrivial to implement, but they're much harder on a darknet. Perfect anonymity is either impossible or very close, but Freenet is doing pretty well for many purposes. Stronger anonymity guarantees, and resistance to attackers with more substantial reso
      • though the fact that they've added the darknet mode suggests that that they aren't 100% confident about that!

        That is completely and utterly wrong. The darknet mode was added to prevent harvesting of nodes simply by joining the network. In 0.5 (and in 0.7 with activated opennet) you can create a list of all Freenet nodes just by waiting. Nodes that do not have opennet activated are not found by this method (unless you are directly connected to them in which case you wouldnâ(TM)t need to search for them). That is the reason for darknet.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Whats the advantages of using freenet vs using bittorrent?
      If your in darknet mode isnt that the same as a private tracker?
      If your not in darknet mode arnt you just as exposed as BT?

      First of all, unless you got your torrents encrypted the ISP can see everything. With torrent connections encrypted, they can still see you downloading the .torrent file. With Freenet they can't see anything of meaning in either darknet or opennet mode, though it's not like the ISPs really care because they throttle by protocol and/or traffic volume anyway. I suppose it's if you think all your traffic gets routed by AT&T to the NSA.

      A private tracker hides what you're downloading, but if the RIAA/MPAA g

  • Pedophiles! Pedophiles, pedophiles, pedophiles!! Obscenity!! Pedophiles! Terrorists!! Filth!! Pedophiles, pedophiles, pedophiles!! Terrorists! Terrorist pedophiles!! Pedophile terrorists? Pedophiles! Terrorists! Criminals!! Islamofacists!! Think of the children!!

    If You Have Nothing To Hide Then You Have Nothing To Fear.

    </newscoverage>
    • Pedophiles! Pedophiles, pedophiles, pedophiles!!
      No, this is the level of Slashdot discourse. The expected level of public discourse will involve pitchforks, torches and public executions of freenet users, pediatricians and pedicurists.
    • by samael ( 12612 ) *
      Surely the problem with Pedophiles is that they _do_ think of the children?
  • I gave RC1 a try, but then gave up when I found out that the potentially most interesting feature, the FROST message board, had several exploits in it and was being DoS'ed to oblivion and back. The FMS system is an interesting replacement, but it's still not widely used and without the ability to search for new newsgroups.
    • by evanbd ( 210358 )
      FMS is much more widely used these days; Toad did a (very cursory, I believe) code review and is now using it. There's a list of all newsgroups that people you know of have posted to; it's not very long, generally, so searching isn't particularly required (and is your newsreader's problem anyway).
  • My country has a problem that I perceive as a big issue: although, in theory, freedom of expression is guaranteed by law, in practice, you will get your ass seriously sued if you touch on some flaming issue (which can be anything the person on the other end of the screen thinks).

    Journalists that work for big media outlets don't have this problem so much here in Brazil because they have teams of lawyers to fight the legal battles. But any blogger can get in serious trouble. Having to sell your furniture beca

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