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What is tReflector?
tReflector is a tiny Java app recieves traffic from all computers that connected to it, and sends it to a configured server and vice-versa. In this way, both server and client IPs are shielded from eachother. When a client connects, it believes that the Reflector is the server, and the server thinks that the Reflector is the client.
Requirements
Java, and a computer that was made after 1996.
Usage
Boot your l33t terminal and type java -jar tReflector.jar. If it's your first time starting it, a config file will be generated. Shut it down and edit your config like a pro. Once you're done, start tReflector again and have fun.
FAQ
Q: Can this be used for web traffic? A: In very few cases. For some reason, it doesn't like web.
Q: What does l33t mean? A: Look it up.
Q: Does this protect my client and server identity entirely? A: In some cases, yes, but it really depends on what you're reflecting.
Q: But my computer was made in 1996! What do I do? A: Get a new one. A crappy tower from 2008 casts $60.
Q: Does tReflector keep logs? A: No.
Q: Why is half of this FAQ comprised of joke questions? A: The bigger the FAQ, the better the software
Check out the GitHub page for more details!
Tell me what you think in the comments!
tReflector is a tiny Java app recieves traffic from all computers that connected to it, and sends it to a configured server and vice-versa. In this way, both server and client IPs are shielded from eachother. When a client connects, it believes that the Reflector is the server, and the server thinks that the Reflector is the client.
Requirements
Java, and a computer that was made after 1996.
Usage
Boot your l33t terminal and type java -jar tReflector.jar. If it's your first time starting it, a config file will be generated. Shut it down and edit your config like a pro. Once you're done, start tReflector again and have fun.
FAQ
Q: Can this be used for web traffic? A: In very few cases. For some reason, it doesn't like web.
Q: What does l33t mean? A: Look it up.
Q: Does this protect my client and server identity entirely? A: In some cases, yes, but it really depends on what you're reflecting.
Q: But my computer was made in 1996! What do I do? A: Get a new one. A crappy tower from 2008 casts $60.
Q: Does tReflector keep logs? A: No.
Q: Why is half of this FAQ comprised of joke questions? A: The bigger the FAQ, the better the software
Check out the GitHub page for more details!
Tell me what you think in the comments!