![]() I’ve had the Onion site mirror ready to go for over nine months. ![]() I’ve decided to offer an Onion site mirror to help ensure global availability and help protect people’s anonymity. However, it’s no fun being blocked and it exposes some uncomfortable realities about national takes on internet governance. However, I have admittedly written some articles about technologies (including VPNs and crypto-currencies) that are banned in some countries (including some of those mentioned above). I don’t believe I’ve published anything on Ctrl blog that has resulted in it being targeted by any government. ![]() These blocks have likely been the result of automated systems. Russia threatened to block Ctrl blog’s email provider in 2020. Ctrl blog was unavailable for some visitors in 2019 after temporarily having been placed on a piracy block list for 12 days (unknown reason), and on a list of websites spreading malware for 9 days (unknown reason). Turkey blocked Ctrl blog’s CDN for five days in 2018. In 20, Ctrl blog was intermittently blocked in China over a dozen times. Note that the Tor Browser offers better privacy protections than Brave with Tor mode. You can also use the special Private Window with Tor mode in the Brave Browser (Linux, MacOS, and Windows versions only). You need a specialized web browser called Tor Browser (for Android, Linux, MacOS, and Windows) to access Onion sites. It can be used to increase privacy, routing security, and to route around censorship. Tor makes it difficult for governments, internet service providers, and others to identify or block specific websites. ![]() Tor is a specialized program that anonymizes the network routes and contents of your internet traffic. Ctrl blog is now available in the Tor Browser on the Onion network.
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