The introduction of a Guardian onion service means that the entire communication pathway between a reader and the Guardian takes place within the Tor network, thereby avoiding potential risks with the “hop” between the Tor network and the world wide web service. But the browsers’ communications have to exit the Tor network for the final leg of the journey in order to get to the site on the normal world wide web. These browsers route their communications over the Tor network – thereby concealing the reader’s location. Guardian readers have always been able to access using tools such as Tor Browser. This means users can bypass censorship in parts of the world where access to independent news might be difficult or if certain websites and services are banned. Tor also makes it harder for internet service providers to identify what their users are accessing. The Tor network helps conceal its users’ locations, which makes tracking their internet activity much more difficult.
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