Comment by tastroder

7 years ago

From the linked page "Privacy Pass uses elliptic curve cryptography to generate 'anonymous' tokens after a single CAPTCHA page is solved."

In any case - privacy implications aside - having to install an extension to get around their risk assessment algorithm going wrong seems like placing the burden in very much the wrong place.

edit: was wrong about who created the extension

PrivacyPass is not their thing:

https://privacypass.github.io/

They run a service that shows high-risk visitors (or whom they deem high-risk) a challenge. They support a third-party extension that lets you vouch for yourself on other websites anonymously. The alternative is that they don't support it.

The other things they do are debatable, but this is a good thing.

  • Oh, thanks for pointing that out, totally missed that part! In that case, at least it's anonymous, yeah.

    • Yeah, in my view, it's nice that they're supporting a published way of anonymously vouching for myself. Maybe it's less than awesome that every visitor from Romania (as an arbitrary example) is considered a criminal, but supporting PrivacyPass is a nice move.