http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onion_Routing

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Source: Wikipedia

In Japan, the anonymous P2P clients Winny and its successor Share are the most popular filesharing clients in the country.

In the United States, Freenet is a mildly popular P2P network that is used as an anonymous, P2P version of the World Wide Web. Other, lesser known filesharing clients include:

* Azureus was the first Java BitTorrent client that made it possible to switch to anonymous mode on the I2P and Tor (anonymous network).
* ANts P2P
* Entropy was written in response to Freenet. It accomplishes the same task, and has the same interface, but the internal implementation is very different, it's written in C, it claims to be much faster, and easy on the computer's resources. However, entropy is no longer in development.
* Free Haven
* GNUnet
* I2P
* i2phex (http://www.i2phex.tk)
* JetiAnts (http://www.jetiants.tk)
* MFC Mute ,written in C, and Napshare ,written in wxWidgets, are clients of the MUTE network.
* Mnet
* Mojo nation
* MUTE

* Publius
* http://www.peercast.org
* Tangler
* WASTE

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Some security breaches in current networks and their solutions

* In countries where P2P is forbidden, your ISP can suspect that you use P2P since most of the networks don't use standard ports like https or pop-ssl by default (this solution, along with using a layer of standard ssl, would be a very simple form of steganography)
* Traffic analysis of all your links by your ISP could easily show that you automatically forward some documents. Solution: even when the links are inactive, send random padding bytes.
* In countries where strong crypto is forbidden, serious steganography should be used.

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See also

* F2F networks

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