Since Tails uses Debian as its foundation, the privacy-focused OS gets all the benefits of the new release. For example, ...
Do you know you can use a USB stick or DVD to anonymize, encrypt, and hide everything you actually do on a computer? Yes, it is possible, and the answer is Tails Live Operating System. Tails is a ...
The anonymous operating system that Edward Snowden used to evade the National Security Agency has more than doubled in popularity and use in the last year since the NSA whistleblower first made ...
A major update has been released today for the Tails operating system, taking the software to version Tails 2.0 which is now available to download directly from the official website via the link below ...
Tails, a once widely unknown security tool now famous as the system that protected Edward Snowden during and after his 2013 leak of National Security Agency documents, has only grown in popularity ...
When NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden first emailed Glenn Greenwald, he insisted on using email encryption software called PGP for all communications. But this month, we learned that Snowden used ...
The Tor Project (the group behind the Tor browser) just merged with the organization that developed the security-hardened ...
The Tor Project is merging operations with Tails, a portable Linux-based operating system focused on preserving user privacy and anonymity. Tails will be incorporated “into the Tor Project’s structure ...
The team behind the Tails Operating System have announced the availability of Tails 4.0, the first major released to be based on Debian 10. With the re-basing of the operating system, new software is ...
Tails, a privacy and anonymity-focused Linux distribution most famously used by Edward Snowden, just released version 1.4. Tails stands for “The Amnesiac Incognito Live System,” and it’s designed to ...
Whenever Mozilla pushes out a new version of its Firefox web browser, you can always guarantee that an update to the Tor Browser and the Tails operating system will be close behind, alas, with Firefox ...