20.03% of Alexa Top 500 website front-page loads showed discrimination against Tor exit users. Exercising search functionality on compatible sites raised discrimination by 3.89% (to 21.33%), while exercising login functionality raised it by 7.48% (to 24.56%), demonstrating that headless front-page-only crawlers significantly underestimate the true blocking rate Tor users face.
From 2017-singh-characterizing — Characterizing the Nature and Dynamics of Tor Exit Blocking
· §6.4, Table 6
· 2017
· USENIX Security Symposium
Implications
Discrimination at authenticated or interactive flows (login, search) is substantially higher than at front-page loads — circumvention tools must account for this compounding at real user workflows, not just homepage reachability.
Measurement frameworks evaluating blocking of Tor-based tools should exercise login and search interactions, not just front-page loads, to avoid underestimating real-world discrimination by several percentage points.