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Difference between revisions of "garlic routing"

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m (Garlic routing moved to garlic routing: garlic routing is usually non-capitalized)
 
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'''Garlic routing''' is a technique for pseudonimous communication employed in [[anonymity network]]s.  To protect the identity of the sender, messages are encrypted multiple times with the [[public key]]s of selected nodes on the network.  To be delivered the encrypted packets must be received by routers selected by the sender, in the order specified by the sender.  Differently from [[onion routing]], an encrypted packet ("onion") can contain multiple packets ("cloves") with different destinations, and the sender is not required to specify a return path for the message.
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'''Garlic routing''' is a communication technique employed in [[anonymity network]]s.  To protect the identity of the sender, messages are encrypted multiple times with the [[public key]]s of selected nodes on the network.  To be delivered the encrypted packets must be received by routers selected by the sender, in the order specified by the sender.  Differently from [[onion routing]], an encrypted packet ("onion") can contain multiple packets ("cloves") with different destinations, and the sender is not required to specify a return path for the message.
  
 
===See also===
 
===See also===
* [[i2p]]
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* [[I2P]]
  
 
===External links===
 
===External links===
 
* [http://www.i2p.net/how_garlicrouting Garlic routing in I2P]
 
* [http://www.i2p.net/how_garlicrouting Garlic routing in I2P]
  
[[Category:Onion routing]][[Category:Routing algorithms]][[Category:Anonymous communication]]
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[[Category:Routing algorithms]][[Category:Anonymous communication]]

Latest revision as of 15:59, 1 May 2006

Garlic routing is a communication technique employed in anonymity networks. To protect the identity of the sender, messages are encrypted multiple times with the public keys of selected nodes on the network. To be delivered the encrypted packets must be received by routers selected by the sender, in the order specified by the sender. Differently from onion routing, an encrypted packet ("onion") can contain multiple packets ("cloves") with different destinations, and the sender is not required to specify a return path for the message.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]