Onion routing has long been synonymous with layered privacy: messages wrapped in successive encryptions and relayed through a chain of nodes so each hop knows only its predecessor and successor. As threats evolve and performance demands rise, "Topic Links 2.0"—an imagined next-generation approach—offers a vision for scaling anonymity, improving usability, and addressing modern adversaries without sacrificing core privacy guarantees. This post outlines what such an evolution might look like, why it matters, and the key trade-offs designers will face.
, a legendary "Onion" directory—a central hub that organized the chaotic, unindexed world of hidden services into neat categories.
Onion routing has long been synonymous with layered privacy: messages wrapped in successive encryptions and relayed through a chain of nodes so each hop knows only its predecessor and successor. As threats evolve and performance demands rise, "Topic Links 2.0"—an imagined next-generation approach—offers a vision for scaling anonymity, improving usability, and addressing modern adversaries without sacrificing core privacy guarantees. This post outlines what such an evolution might look like, why it matters, and the key trade-offs designers will face.
, a legendary "Onion" directory—a central hub that organized the chaotic, unindexed world of hidden services into neat categories.