Torora is a lightweight cross-platform browser for dedicated anonymous browsing with Tor®.
- As a dedicated Tor browser, Torora provides explicit state separation for the user. This means the user cannot fall into the trap of mixing anonymous and non-anonymous browsing with the same application.
- Torora prevents the user from browsing until it has verified the presence of a working Tor® installation.
- Torora attempts to disable/modify most browser behaviour that may allow the user to leak information to remote eavesdroppers.
- The Torora project includes a patch for webkit that allows users to enable javascript while endeavouring to protect against common javascript-based profiling attacks.
You can build the current version of Torora using the instructions here.
Torora's specification, roadmap and requirements documents are available here. These documents, and the approach used by Torora in general, are guided by Mike Perry's work on the firefox plug-in torbutton.
Torora is still in development, so is not safe for use where assured anonymity is required. Although a working copy of Torora can be built, and is available for evaluation, you should not rely on Torora to behave as anything other than proof-of-concept software.
Torora is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Tor® project. This product is produced independently from the Tor® anonymity software and carries no guarantee from The Tor Project about quality, suitability or anything else.
Torora is a fork/clone of the Arora browser.
Here are some screenshots.