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author | Micah Lee <micah@micahflee.com> | 2020-10-12 22:40:55 -0700 |
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committer | Micah Lee <micah@micahflee.com> | 2020-10-12 22:40:55 -0700 |
commit | f4abcf1be9122a28005dc3e0949bf5952192e982 (patch) | |
tree | 0c6fdb71401ac294403fe87730ef6a73b0d7498a /docs/source/locale/tr/LC_MESSAGES/security.po | |
parent | b81a55f546ffaf00586e43cdc279b967da096e4f (diff) | |
download | onionshare-f4abcf1be9122a28005dc3e0949bf5952192e982.tar.gz onionshare-f4abcf1be9122a28005dc3e0949bf5952192e982.zip |
Add onionshare CLI to cli folder, move GUI to desktop folder, and start refactoring it to work with briefcase
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/source/locale/tr/LC_MESSAGES/security.po')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/source/locale/tr/LC_MESSAGES/security.po | 114 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 114 deletions
diff --git a/docs/source/locale/tr/LC_MESSAGES/security.po b/docs/source/locale/tr/LC_MESSAGES/security.po deleted file mode 100644 index 13d11a17..00000000 --- a/docs/source/locale/tr/LC_MESSAGES/security.po +++ /dev/null @@ -1,114 +0,0 @@ -# SOME DESCRIPTIVE TITLE. -# Copyright (C) Micah Lee, et al. -# This file is distributed under the same license as the OnionShare package. -# FIRST AUTHOR <EMAIL@ADDRESS>, 2020. -# -#, fuzzy -msgid "" -msgstr "" -"Project-Id-Version: OnionShare 2.3\n" -"Report-Msgid-Bugs-To: \n" -"POT-Creation-Date: 2020-09-03 11:37-0700\n" -"PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n" -"Last-Translator: FULL NAME <EMAIL@ADDRESS>\n" -"Language-Team: LANGUAGE <LL@li.org>\n" -"MIME-Version: 1.0\n" -"Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8\n" -"Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n" -"Generated-By: Babel 2.8.0\n" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:2 -msgid "Security design" -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:4 -msgid "" -"First read :ref:`how_it_works` to understand the basics of how OnionShare" -" works." -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:6 -msgid "Like all software, OnionShare may contain bugs or vulnerabilities." -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:9 -msgid "What OnionShare protects against" -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:11 -msgid "" -"**Third parties don't have access to anything that happens in " -"OnionShare.** When you use OnionShare, you host services directly on your" -" computer. For example, when you share files with OnionShare, you don't " -"upload these files to any server, and when you start an OnionShare chat " -"room, your computer is the chat room server itself. Traditional ways of " -"sharing files or setting up websites and chat rooms require trusting a " -"service with access to your data." -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:13 -msgid "" -"**Network eavesdroppers can't spy on anything that happens in OnionShare " -"in transit.** Because connections between Tor onion services and Tor " -"Browser are end-to-end encrypted, no network attackers can eavesdrop on " -"what happens in an OnionShare service. If the eavesdropper is positioned " -"on the OnionShare user's end, the Tor Browser user's end, or is a " -"malicious Tor node, they will only see Tor traffic. If the eavesdropper " -"is a malicious rendezvous node used to connect Tor Browser with " -"OnionShare's onion service, the traffic will be encrypted using the onion" -" service key." -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:15 -msgid "" -"**Anonymity of OnionShare users are protected by Tor.** OnionShare and " -"Tor Browser protect the anonymity of the users. As long as the OnionShare" -" user anonymously communicates the OnionShare address with the Tor " -"Browser users, the Tor Browser users and eavesdroppers can't learn the " -"identity of the OnionShare user." -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:17 -msgid "" -"**If an attacker learns about the onion service, they still can't access " -"anything.** There have been attacks against the Tor network that can " -"enumerate onion services. Even if someone discovers the .onion address of" -" an OnionShare onion service, they can't access it without also knowing " -"the service's random password (unless, of course, the OnionShare users " -"chooses to disable the password and make it public). The password is " -"generated by choosing two random words from a list of 6800 words, meaning" -" there are 6800^2, or about 46 million possible password. But they can " -"only make 20 wrong guesses before OnionShare stops the server, preventing" -" brute force attacks against the password." -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:20 -msgid "What OnionShare doesn't protect against" -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:22 -msgid "" -"**Communicating the OnionShare address might not be secure.** The " -"OnionShare user is responsible for securely communicating the OnionShare " -"address with people. If they send it insecurely (such as through an email" -" message, and their email is being monitored by an attacker), the " -"eavesdropper will learn that they're using OnionShare. If the attacker " -"loads the address in Tor Browser before the legitimate recipient gets to " -"it, they can access the service. If this risk fits the user's threat " -"model, they must find a more secure way to communicate the address, such " -"as in an encrypted email, chat, or voice call. This isn't necessary in " -"cases where OnionShare is being used for something that isn't secret." -msgstr "" - -#: ../../source/security.rst:24 -msgid "" -"**Communicating the OnionShare address might not be anonymous.** While " -"OnionShare and Tor Browser allow for anonymity, if the user wishes to " -"remain anonymous they must take extra steps to ensure this while " -"communicating the OnionShare address. For example, they might need to use" -" Tor to create a new anonymous email or chat account, and only access it " -"over Tor, to use for sharing the address. This isn't necessary in cases " -"where there's no need to protect anonymity, such as co-workers who know " -"each other sharing work documents." -msgstr "" - |