From 9a5eb8c89b35ddc0d97167a72dac647380e59b43 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Bob Mottram
-freedombone-image -t beaglebone --onion yes +freedombone-image -t beaglebone --onion-addresses-only yes
-Onion addresses have the advantage of being difficult to censor and you don't need to buy a domain or have a dynamic DNS account. An onion based system also means you don't need to think about NAT traversal type issues. +Onion addresses have the advantage of being difficult to censor and you don't need to buy a domain or have a dynamic DNS account. An onion based system also means you don't need to think about NAT traversal type issues. This does not mean that everything gets routed through Tor, it just means that the sites for apps which you install will be available through Tor's address system.
-The version in which sites are available only via onion addresses is the easiest to get started with, since you can evaluate the system without committing to buying an ICANN domain name or needing to get involved with SSL/TLS certificates at all. However, if you do want your sites to be available typically as subdomains of a domain name which you own then remove the –onion yes option from the last command shown above. Also see the guide on setting up an ICANN domain name. +The version in which sites are available only via onion addresses is the easiest to get started with, since you can evaluate the system without committing to buying an ICANN domain name or needing to get involved with SSL/TLS certificates at all. However, if you do want your sites to be available typically as subdomains of a domain name which you own then remove the –onion-addresses-only yes option from the last command shown above. Also see the guide on setting up an ICANN domain name. +
+ ++The onion-addresses-only option does not mean that everything gets routed through Tor. It's intended to provide accessible web apps with minimum fuss and without needing to buy a clearnet domain name or mess with forwarding ports. Using apps via their onion addresses may provide some degree of anonymity but it may not be perfect and anonymity isn't the aim of this system (if you want that then use TAILS).
From 78cfd5ad1066c313c1ef160ffe91d9efd017f934 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Bob Mottram
See here for the complete list of apps. In addition to those as part of the base install you get an email server.
Yes. The minimum requirements are to have some hardware that you can install Debian onto and also that you have administrator access to your internet router so that you can forward ports to the system which has Freedombone installed.
When the project began in late 2013 the FreedomBox project seemed to be going nowhere, and was only designed to work with the DreamPlug hardware. There was some new hardware out - the Beaglebone Black - which could run Debian and was also a free hardware design so seemed more appropriate. Hence the name "Freedombone", being like FreedomBox but on a Beaglebone. There are some similarities and differences between the two projects:
The FreedomBox project supports Raspberry Pi builds, and the image build system for Freedombone is based on the same system. However, although the Raspberry Pi can run a version of Debian it requires a closed proprietary blob in order to boot the hardware. Who knows what that blob might contain or what exploits it could facilitate. From an adversarial point of view if you were trying to deliver "bulk equipment interference" then it doesn't get any better than piggybacking on something which has control of the boot process, and hence all subsequently run processes.
Before you run screaming for the hills based upon whatever scare story you may have just read in the mainstream media there are a few things worthy of consideration. Tor is installed by default on Freedombone, but not as a relay or exit node. It's only used to provide onion addresses so that this gives you or the viewers of your sites some choice about how they access the information. It also allows you to subscribe to and read RSS feeds privately.
+Within this project Tor is used more to provide accessibility than the anonymity factor for which Tor is better known. The onion address system provides a way of being able to access sites even if you don't own a conventional domain name or don't have administrator access to your local internet router to be able to do port forwarding.
+
+Tor is installed by default, but it's not configured as a relay or exit node. From the administrator control panel you can optionally set up a Tor bridge, but this is only for adverse situations and not usually advisable.
+
+When you install an app you will be able to access it from its onion address.
+
+Even if you're running the "onion only" build, this only means that sites are accessible via onion addresses. It doesn't mean that everything gets routed through Tor. If full anonymity is your aim then it's probably a good idea to just stick strictly to using TAILS.
+
Github is paradoxically a centralized, closed and proprietary system which happens to mostly host free and open source projects. Up until now it has been relatively benign, but at some point in the name of "growth" it will likely start becoming more evil, or just become like SourceForge - which was also once much loved by FOSS developers, but turned into a den of malvertizing.
Ordinarily this is good advice. However, the threat model for a device in your home is different from the one for a generic server in a massive warehouse. Compare and contrast:
Probably you need to add the site to the NoScript whitelist. Typically click/press on the noscript icon (or select from the menu on mobile) then select whitelist and add the site URL. You may also need to disable HTTPS Everywhere when using onion addresses, which don't use https.
It was originally designed to run on the Beaglebone Black, but that should be regarded as the most minimal system, because it's single core and has by today's standards a small amount of memory. Obviously the more powerful the hardware is the faster things like web pages (blog, social networking, etc) will be served but the more electricity such a system will require if you're running it 24/7. A good compromise between performance and energy consumption is something like an old netbook. The battery of an old netbook or laptop even gives you UPS capability to keep the system going during brief power outages or cable re-arrangements, and that means using full disk encryption on the server also becomes more practical.
Yes. Freedombone can support a small number of users, for a "friends and family" type of home installation. This gives them access to an email account, XMPP, SIP phone and the blog (depending on whether the variant which you installed includes those).
Celebrities recommend Signal. It's Free Software so it must be good, right?
On mobile there are various options. The apps which are likely to be most secure are ones which have end-to-end encryption enabled by default and which can also be onion routed via Orbot. End-to-end encryption secures the content of the message and onion routing obscures the metadata, making it hard for a passive adversary to know who is communicating with who.
-There are many other fashionable chat apps with end-to-end security, but often they are closed source, have a single central server or can't be onion routed. It's also important to remember that closed source chat apps should be assumed to be untrustworthy, since their security cannot be independently verified.
+There are many other fashionable chat apps with end-to-end security, but often they are closed source, have a single central server or can't be onion routed. It's also important to remember that closed source chat apps should be assumed to be untrustworthy, since their security cannot be independently verified.
To remove a user:
If you're making profits out of the logs by running large server warehouses and then data mining what users click on - as is the business model of well known internet companies - then logging everything makes total sense. However, if you're running a home server then logging really only makes sense if you're trying to diagnose some specific problem with the system, and outside of that context logging everything becomes more of a liability than an asset.
The tripwire will be automatically reset once per week. If you want to reset it earlier then do the following:
"We kill people based on metadata"
@@ -706,9 +730,9 @@ Even when using Freedombone metadata analysis by third parties is still possible
If you run the command:
Suppose that some new encryption vulnerability has been announced and that you need to change your encryption settings. Maybe an algorithm thought to be secure is now no longer so and you need to remove it. You can change your settings by doing the following:
Suppose that you have bought a domain name (rather than using a free subdomain on freedns) and you want to use that instead.
If you did the full install or selected the social variant then the system will have tried to obtain a Let's Encrypt certificate automatically during the install process. If this failed for any reason, or if you have created a new site which you need a certificate for then do the following:
Normally certificates will be automatically renewed once per month, so you don't need to be concerned about it. If anything goes wrong with the automatic renewal then you should receive a warning email.
Most likely it's because Let's Encrypt doesn't support your particular domain or subdomain. Currently free subdomains tend not to work. You'll need to buy a domain name, link it to your dynamic DNS account and then do:
That pledge is utterly worthless. Years ago people trusted Google in the same sort of way, because they promised not be be evil and because a lot of the engineers working for them seemed like honest types who were "on our side". Post-nymwars and post-PRISM we know exactly how much Google cared about the privacy and security of its users. But Google is only one particular example. In general don't trust pledges made by companies, even if the people running them seem really sincere.
Welcome to the world of email. Email is really the archetypal decentralized service, developed during the early days of the internet. In principle anyone can run an email server, and that's exactly what you're doing with Freedombone. Email is very useful, but it has a big problem, and that's that the protocols are totally insecure. That made it easy for spammers to do their thing, and in response highly elaborate spam filtering and blocking systems were developed. Chances are that your emails are being blocked in this way. Sometimes the blocking is so indisciminate that entire countries are excluded. What can you do about it? Unless you control the block list at the receiving end you may not be able to do much unless you can find an email proxy server which is trusted by the receiving server.
If you can find some details for an obfs4 Tor bridge (its IP address, port number and key or nickname) then you can set up the system to use it to connect to the Tor network. Unlike relay nodes the IP addresses for bridges are not public information and so can't be easily known and added to block lists by authoritarian regimes or over-zealous ISPs.
If you're being pestered by some domain which contains bad/illegal/harrassing content or irritating users you can block domains at the firewall level. Go to the administrator control panel and select domain blocking. You can then block, unblock and view the list of blocked domains.
If the system doesn't boot and reports an error which includes /dev/mapper/loop0p1 then reboot with Ctrl-Alt-Del and when you see the grub menu press e and manually change /dev/mapper/loop0p1 to /dev/sdb1, then press Ctrl-x. If that doesn't work then reboot and try /dev/sdc1 instead.
-
What applications are supported?
+What applications are supported?
-
I don't have a static IP address. Can I still install this system?
+I don't have a static IP address. Can I still install this system?
-
Why Freedombone and not FreedomBox?
+Why Freedombone and not FreedomBox?
-
Why not support building images for Raspberry Pi?
+Why not support building images for Raspberry Pi?
-
Why use Tor? I've heard it's used by bad people
+Why use Tor? I've heard it's used by bad people
-
Why use Github?
+How is Tor integrated with Freedombone?
-
+
+Keys and emails should not be stored on servers. Why do you do that?
+Why use Github?
+
+
Keys and emails should not be stored on servers. Why do you do that?
@@ -289,103 +293,103 @@ for the JavaScript code in this tag.
-
Why can't I access my .onion site with a Tor browser?
+Why can't I access my .onion site with a Tor browser?
-
What is the best hardware to run this system on?
+What is the best hardware to run this system on?
-
Can I add more users to the system?
+Can I add more users to the system?
-
Why not use Signal for mobile chat?
+Why not use Signal for mobile chat?
-
What is the most secure chat app to use on mobile?
+What is the most secure chat app to use on mobile?
-
How do I remove a user from the system?
+How do I remove a user from the system?
-
Why is logging for web sites turned off by default?
+Why is logging for web sites turned off by default?
-
How do I reset the tripwire?
+How do I reset the tripwire?
-
Is metadata protected?
+Is metadata protected?
-
How do I create email processing rules?
+How do I create email processing rules?
-
Why isn't dynamic DNS working?
+Why isn't dynamic DNS working?
-
How do I change my encryption settings?
+How do I change my encryption settings?
-
How do I get a domain name?
+How do I get a domain name?
-
How do I get a "real" SSL/TLS/HTTPS certificate?
+How do I get a "real" SSL/TLS/HTTPS certificate?
-
How do I renew a Let's Encrypt certificate?
+How do I renew a Let's Encrypt certificate?
-
I tried to renew a Let's Encrypt certificate and it failed. What should I do?
+I tried to renew a Let's Encrypt certificate and it failed. What should I do?
-
Why not use the services of $company instead? They took the Seppuku pledge
+Why not use the services of $company instead? They took the Seppuku pledge
-
Why does my email keep getting rejected as spam by Gmail/etc?
+Why does my email keep getting rejected as spam by Gmail/etc?
-
Tor is censored/blocked in my area. What can I do?
+Tor is censored/blocked in my area. What can I do?
-
I want to block a particular domain from getting its content into my social network sites
+I want to block a particular domain from getting its content into my social network sites
-
-The mesh system doesn't boot from USB drive
+The mesh system doesn't boot from USB drive
What applications are supported?
-What applications are supported?
+I don't have a static IP address. Can I still install this system?
-I don't have a static IP address. Can I still install this system?
+Why Freedombone and not FreedomBox?
-Why Freedombone and not FreedomBox?
+Similarities
-Similarities
+
Differences
-Differences
+
Why not support building images for Raspberry Pi?
-Why not support building images for Raspberry Pi?
+Why use Tor? I've heard it's used by bad people
-Why use Tor? I've heard it's used by bad people
+Why use Github?
-How is Tor integrated with Freedombone?
+Why use Github?
+Keys and emails should not be stored on servers. Why do you do that?
-Keys and emails should not be stored on servers. Why do you do that?
+Why can't I access my .onion site with a Tor browser?
-Why can't I access my .onion site with a Tor browser?
+What is the best hardware to run this system on?
-What is the best hardware to run this system on?
+Can I add more users to the system?
-Can I add more users to the system?
+Why not use Signal for mobile chat?
-Why not use Signal for mobile chat?
+What is the most secure chat app to use on mobile?
-What is the most secure chat app to use on mobile?
+How do I remove a user from the system?
-How do I remove a user from the system?
+Why is logging for web sites turned off by default?
-Why is logging for web sites turned off by default?
+How do I reset the tripwire?
-How do I reset the tripwire?
+Is metadata protected?
-Is metadata protected?
+
How do I create email processing rules?
-How do I create email processing rules?
+
@@ -764,9 +788,9 @@ Spamassassin is also available and within Mutt you can use the S (shift+s) key t
ssh username@domainname -p 2222
Why isn't dynamic DNS working?
-Why isn't dynamic DNS working?
+How do I change my encryption settings?
-How do I change my encryption settings?
+How do I get a domain name?
-How do I get a domain name?
+How do I get a "real" SSL/TLS/HTTPS certificate?
-How do I get a "real" SSL/TLS/HTTPS certificate?
+How do I renew a Let's Encrypt certificate?
-How do I renew a Let's Encrypt certificate?
+I tried to renew a Let's Encrypt certificate and it failed. What should I do?
-I tried to renew a Let's Encrypt certificate and it failed. What should I do?
+Why not use the services of $company instead? They took the Seppuku pledge
-Why not use the services of $company instead? They took the Seppuku pledge
+Why does my email keep getting rejected as spam by Gmail/etc?
-Why does my email keep getting rejected as spam by Gmail/etc?
+Tor is censored/blocked in my area. What can I do?
-Tor is censored/blocked in my area. What can I do?
+I want to block a particular domain from getting its content into my social network sites
-I want to block a particular domain from getting its content into my social network sites
+The mesh system doesn't boot from USB drive
-The mesh system doesn't boot from USB drive
+