While Tor and Lokinet are both onion routers, they are very different at both the protocol and infrastructure levels.
Tor relies on a network of volunteer-operated relays and a set of central directory authorities, and this infrastructure introduces a number of weaknesses and limitations. Because Tor’s circuit moderation is bandwidth-weighted, you are much more likely to use high-bandwidth nodes than low-bandwidth ones, meaning that a large percentage of Tor’s 7000+ nodes are underutilised due to having insufficient bandwidth. Additionally, Tor relies on a limited set of directory authorities. When these directory authorities are compromised or suffer from technical issues, the stability of the entire Tor network suffers because the network is unable to agree on what the node set is or the roles of nodes in the network (whether they were guard nodes, exit nodes, relays, etc.).
Instead of relying on volunteers, Lokinet leverages the Oxen Service Node Network. Because Oxen’s service node operators are required to provide high-quality nodes — and are actively incentivised to do so — Lokinet’s relay network is consistent and reliable. Lokinet also inherits the market-based Sybil attack resistance of the Oxen blockchain, increasing Lokinet’s security against such attacks.
Instead of Tor’s system of central directory authorities, Lokinet stores the state of the service node network on the blockchain. Every service node has access to this list, and comes to a consensus on it, making Lokinet significantly more decentralised than Tor.
Lokinet is also more versatile than Tor — Tor operates on the transport layer and is only able to carry TCP traffic, while Lokinet operates on the network layer, meaning it can onion-route any IP-based protocol: TCP, UDP, ICMP, etc. This means Lokinet can be used for much more than just web browsing — it can also handle things like media streaming and video conferencing.
I don’t think we are going to agree with each other on this. I do agree it’s new and if things fall apart it could be pretty easy to say ah-ha looking at it through hindsight but I don’t think OPTF trying a crypto approach is anymore of a scam than a lot of other crypto currencies.
This from the Lokinet website
@CorrodedCranium Yeah it’s just Tor + blockchain, for marketing and exitscam purposes.
Tor is pretty trusted for security. Lokinet isn’t.
Seems pretty elaborate for a non-profit that has been delcaring their annual allocation of funds for years.
Lokinet is still experimental and hasn’t undergone a third party security audit to my knowledge in the same way their app Session has.
@CorrodedCranium Do you have any idea how many crypto scams have been declaring their annual allocation of funds for years?
I don’t think we are going to agree with each other on this. I do agree it’s new and if things fall apart it could be pretty easy to say ah-ha looking at it through hindsight but I don’t think OPTF trying a crypto approach is anymore of a scam than a lot of other crypto currencies.