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Per request of Juli.
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### Being anonymous: <br/>
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### Being anonymous: <br/>
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Your adversaries do not know your real identity, but they might know what you do.<br/>
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Your adversaries do not know your real identity, but they might know what you do.<br/>
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# Trust: the Ultimate Exploit of them All.
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When you connect to ssh.chat (or any other public server), you are trusting that the server is not malicious. A malicious server can easily compromise you (see below) and can easily gather a lot of data about you. If you are not comfortable with the assumption that what you say, who you connect with, what operating system/client you are using and what IP address you use to connect may be published by the server admins: You should host your own server and use that.
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# The SSH Protocol and Anonymity
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# The SSH Protocol and Anonymity
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SSH is not designed to preserve user privacy and anonymity by default. Below are some features and behavior that could uniquely identify you while connecting to an ssh-chat server or when you are using ssh in general:<br/>
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SSH is not designed to preserve user privacy and anonymity by default. Below are some features and behavior that could uniquely identify you while connecting to an ssh-chat server or when you are using ssh in general:<br/>
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