That’s not what I’m saying. The point I’m making is tails feature where it wipes memory when turned off is pointless because ISP can look at the times of tor usage and see what times you were likely using tails, which us why I ask if there is any point in using it?
Memory stores more data than just when you used tor, like websites visited (like resources downloaded on page load through GETs). Your ISP should only be able to tell what the first node you are using is, and if you use an unlisted bridge it should be much harder to even try to correlate, which if your smart should be near impossible anyways.
I think the first responder @grant did understand and answered in a relevant way. I’ll answer your question with a question. What is the point of using VPN if your ISP can correlate times from logs? I think you should get on the Tails site and educate yourself further to better understand use case for Tails.
I think this comment is very arrogant and unhelpful. “I think you should get on the Tails site and educate yourself further to better understand use cases for tails” - instead of telling me what the use cases for tails actually are… Maybe you yourself don’t even know and hence referring me to their website…
Anyhow, I did as you said and researched on tails website what the point of their memory erasure is and was actually hard pressed to find specific detail on what the memory erasure feature is actually intended to do and on their own website
https://tails.net/contribute/design/memory_erasure/
"In order to protect against memory recovery such as cold boot attack, most of the system RAM is overwritten when Tails is being shutdown or when the boot medium is physically removed. "
So, the memory erasure is purely to prevent any kind of memory recovery… Granted this doesn’t really go into any specifics. But the point I was making in this post was Law enforcement are able to pull logs from ISP and see your for usage and so hence they can correlate that and have a decent idea of the times that you were likely using tails.
However, I do believe another user in this thread has cleared up why they do this memory erasure and its to more specifically stop attackers from extracting things like websites visited.
I looked online to figure out what data can be obtained using a cold boot attack and wasnt’t really able to find anything specific enough and so I asked chatgpt and it came back with the below:
"Login Credentials: Usernames, passwords, or other authentication tokens that were in use before the reboot.
Open Files and Documents: Content of files and documents that were open and active in RAM.
Cryptographic Certificates: Digital certificates and keys used for secure communication.
Browser Session Data: Active browser sessions may contain login information, session tokens, or browsing history.
Decryption Keys: Keys used for decrypting encrypted data stored on the computer.
System and Application Data: Configuration settings, temporary data, and other information related to the operating system and running applications."
See, you educated yourself! I only wanted to point you to official documentation with the hope you get in the habit of starting there (with any tech). Ask a hundred people and probably get a hundred differing answers. Look at Stack Overflow and sites like that where there’s always multiple answers. Thankfully there’s usually one with a green tick that is likely the best answer.
Anyway, you now have it in a nutshell - No data to recover = The point of using Tails (without persistence). There’s no such thing as permanent total online anonymity.
Your ISP can see that you used tor but not what for
That’s not what I’m saying. The point I’m making is tails feature where it wipes memory when turned off is pointless because ISP can look at the times of tor usage and see what times you were likely using tails, which us why I ask if there is any point in using it?
Memory stores more data than just when you used tor, like websites visited (like resources downloaded on page load through GETs). Your ISP should only be able to tell what the first node you are using is, and if you use an unlisted bridge it should be much harder to even try to correlate, which if your smart should be near impossible anyways.
If you leave it on as much as you can, and make it generate random traffic, then you’re effectively obfuscating the pattern.
What are you worried about the ISP finding out? Simply the fact you were using Tor?
If that’s the case, I suppose you could use an always-on VPN, and run the Tor browser on that, for example.
I think the first responder @grant did understand and answered in a relevant way. I’ll answer your question with a question. What is the point of using VPN if your ISP can correlate times from logs? I think you should get on the Tails site and educate yourself further to better understand use case for Tails.
I think this comment is very arrogant and unhelpful. “I think you should get on the Tails site and educate yourself further to better understand use cases for tails” - instead of telling me what the use cases for tails actually are… Maybe you yourself don’t even know and hence referring me to their website…
Anyhow, I did as you said and researched on tails website what the point of their memory erasure is and was actually hard pressed to find specific detail on what the memory erasure feature is actually intended to do and on their own website https://tails.net/contribute/design/memory_erasure/
"In order to protect against memory recovery such as cold boot attack, most of the system RAM is overwritten when Tails is being shutdown or when the boot medium is physically removed. "
So, the memory erasure is purely to prevent any kind of memory recovery… Granted this doesn’t really go into any specifics. But the point I was making in this post was Law enforcement are able to pull logs from ISP and see your for usage and so hence they can correlate that and have a decent idea of the times that you were likely using tails.
However, I do believe another user in this thread has cleared up why they do this memory erasure and its to more specifically stop attackers from extracting things like websites visited.
I looked online to figure out what data can be obtained using a cold boot attack and wasnt’t really able to find anything specific enough and so I asked chatgpt and it came back with the below:
"Login Credentials: Usernames, passwords, or other authentication tokens that were in use before the reboot.
Open Files and Documents: Content of files and documents that were open and active in RAM.
Cryptographic Certificates: Digital certificates and keys used for secure communication.
Browser Session Data: Active browser sessions may contain login information, session tokens, or browsing history.
Decryption Keys: Keys used for decrypting encrypted data stored on the computer.
System and Application Data: Configuration settings, temporary data, and other information related to the operating system and running applications."
See, you educated yourself! I only wanted to point you to official documentation with the hope you get in the habit of starting there (with any tech). Ask a hundred people and probably get a hundred differing answers. Look at Stack Overflow and sites like that where there’s always multiple answers. Thankfully there’s usually one with a green tick that is likely the best answer. Anyway, you now have it in a nutshell - No data to recover = The point of using Tails (without persistence). There’s no such thing as permanent total online anonymity.
Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good. Just because it’s physically possible, doesn’t mean you have to make it easy for somebody