![]() ![]() If you use onion services, then Tor Browser does not send a referer headed from one onion serivce to another. "Send the origin, path, and querystring when performing a same-origin request, only send the origin when the protocol security level stays the same while performing a cross-origin request (HTTPS→HTTPS), and send no header to any less-secure destinations (HTTPS→HTTP)." In particular, we set `` as `2`, which is `strict-origin-when-cross-origin`. You can see some of the (more technical) options here: ![]() When you move from one domain to another, then the destination only receives the "origin" in the referer header. If you visit both sites at the same time, then the requests/responses will use the same circuit.įor the referer header, as the previous response said, Tor Browser sends the entire URL when you move from one page to another on the same domain. When you go to Tor Browser uses the same circuit for the requests as when you visited five minutes ago. Each first-party gets its own circuit (where first-party is roughly the the top-level domain plus the subdomain you see in the URL bar, such as "", ""). ![]()
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