Tor vs CJDNS Network Comparison
CJDNS (Caleb James DeLisle's Network Suite) is a mesh networking protocol that creates an encrypted, end-to-end network layer with IPv6 addresses derived from public keys - similar in some respects to Tor's cryptographic addressing (.onion) but with fundamentally different goals and architecture. CJDNS is designed for creating alternative network infrastructure where nodes can communicate without depending on traditional IP routing or Internet Service Providers. Tor is designed for anonymized access to the existing internet. Understanding the different design goals of Tor and CJDNS clarifies when each is appropriate and how they might complement each other in privacy-focused network architectures.
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CJDNS Architecture and Design Goals
Anonymity Comparison
Routing Architecture Differences
Use Cases for CJDNS vs Tor
Deployment and Operation Comparison
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