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@ -202,7 +202,7 @@ Tor has several limitations. For example, if someone with the technical and lega
### What is HTTPS?
Virtually all websites today use [HTTPS](/glossary/#https); the S stands for "secure" (e.g., `https://www.anarsec.guide`). If you try to visit a website without `https://` in the Tor Browser, you will receive a warning before proceeding. If you see `http://` instead of `https://` in front of a website's address, it means that all intermediaries after relay #3 of the Tor network know what you are exchanging with the website (including your credentials). HTTPS means that the digital record of what you do on the site you are visiting is protected by an encryption key that belongs to the site. Intermediaries after relay #3 will know that you are going to, for example, riseup.net, but they will not have access to your emails and passwords, nor will they know if you are checking your emails or reading a random page on the site. A small padlock appears to the left of the site address when you are using HTTPS.
Virtually all websites today use [HTTPS](/glossary/#https) the S stands for "secure" (e.g., `https://www.anarsec.guide`). If you try to visit a website without `https://` in the Tor Browser, you will receive a warning before proceeding. If you see `http://` instead of `https://` in front of a website's address, it means that all intermediaries after relay #3 of the Tor network know what you are exchanging with the website (including your credentials). HTTPS means that the digital record of what you do on the site you are visiting is protected by an encryption key that belongs to the site. Intermediaries after relay #3 will know that you are going to, for example, riseup.net, but they will not have access to your emails and passwords, nor will they know if you are checking your emails or reading a random page on the site. A small padlock appears to the left of the site address when you are using HTTPS.
If there's a yellow warning on the padlock, it means that some elements on the page you're viewing are not encrypted (they use HTTP), which could reveal the exact page or allow intermediaries to partially modify the page. By default, the Tor Browser uses HTTPS-Only Mode to prevent users from visiting HTTP sites.
@ -433,7 +433,7 @@ Sometimes the Synaptic Package Manager will refuse to install software. In this
# Best Practices
[Tails Best Practices](/posts/tails-best) are important to establish before using Tails for highly sensitive activities. To avoid overwhelming yourself, start by learning how to use Tails in basic ways, such as reading anarchist websites or writing texts. See the [Tails tag](/tags/tails/) for tutorials on topics like [removing identifying metadata from files](/posts/metadata/).
[Tails Best Practices](/posts/tails-best) are important to establish before using Tails for highly sensitive activities like [claiming an action](https://notrace.how/resources/#how-to-submit-an-anonymous-communique). To avoid overwhelming yourself, start by learning how to use Tails in basic ways, such as reading anarchist websites or writing texts. See the [Tails tag](/tags/tails/) for tutorials on topics like [removing identifying metadata from files](/posts/metadata/).
*This article is heavily modified from* [TuTORiel Tails](https://infokiosques.net/spip.php?article1726) *(in French), and also includes some excerpts from* [Capulcu #1](https://capulcu.blackblogs.org/neue-texte/bandi/) *(in German).*