this post was submitted on 30 Aug 2024
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Privacy
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Does Tor have no protection against such a simple attack? I always thought any clearnet address i type in the browser (along with the dns query) hops 3 times.
The Tor network cannot protect against that, because the attack circumvents it. Certain tools, like the Tor browser, do have protection against it (as much as they can) when you use them correctly, but they cannot keep users from inadvertently opening a link in some other tool. Nor can they protect against other software on a user's device, like a spyware keyboard or the OS provider working with law enforcement.
It's unlikely that the Tor browser is configured as the default browser, so when you click the link, it will open in something else
Then doesn't that mean that the guy was somehow shortlisted and handpicked to be served that honeypot link?
I can't answer this with confidence, but I was thinking the link in the email opened in the default browser, which wasn't Tor in their case. Or something in the email client perhaps. Ultimately, I have no idea what happened and I was just speculating
You can do DNS in multiple ways. The question is what you try to do, or what your software tries to do.