On 09/07/2016 10:34 AM, George wrote:
> On 09/07/16 11:54, Farid Joubbi wrote:
>> I had not thought of the diversity that way.
>
> There's a host of diversity issues with Tor to cover, but I tend to
> think OS diversity is one of the more critical.
With apologies to Akira Kurosawa, I think of t
On 09/07/2016 01:39 AM, Dave Warren wrote:
> On 2016-09-06 11:29, Green Dream wrote:
>> The whole idea doesn't sit right with me.
>>
>> For one, I'm not sure I'd want any more Five Eyes entities running
>> Exit nodes. Most embassies are already a haven for espionage activity.
>> You'd pretty much
> On 7 Sep 2016, at 22:01, daniel boone wrote:
>
>
> tks John. I am not interested in sticking my neck out like that so I hope the
> project moves forward. I just don't understank why the top 10 relays never
> show anything like that.
Likely because they run out of a datacentre at a large p
George:
> On 09/07/16 11:54, Farid Joubbi wrote:
>> I had not thought of the diversity that way.
>
> There's a host of diversity issues with Tor to cover, but I tend to
> think OS diversity is one of the more critical.
>
> These are some reports we generate at TDP:
>
> https://torbsd.github.io/d
On 09/07/16 11:54, Farid Joubbi wrote:
> I had not thought of the diversity that way.
There's a host of diversity issues with Tor to cover, but I tend to
think OS diversity is one of the more critical.
These are some reports we generate at TDP:
https://torbsd.github.io/dirty-stats.html
>
> Tha
I had not thought of the diversity that way.
Thanks for pointing it out.
I am still interested in the subject though, if anyone has any specific
examples of some kind of general rules of why one OS usually performs better
than some other OS as a tor relay...
I realize that I might not get any
I don't understand what you're saying. Of course the top 10 relays are
also showing their IP address, country and provider (or rather AS name).
Am 07.09.2016 um 14:01 schrieb daniel boone:
>
> tks John. I am not interested in sticking my neck out like that so I
> hope the project moves forward.
"daniel boone"
To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
Subject: Re: [tor-relays] tor-relays Digest, Vol 68, Issue 21
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-rela
This.
Also, I'm not sure, why this info would even concern you (especially
since you're from the US, if I remember correctly). It's not like you're
giving away your home adress or something. If you keep your real name
out of the various configuration fields like relay-nickname and
contact-email, n
Hi!
All modern Operating Systems should be up to the task of running a Tor
relay, if configured right. The question about which one will work best
has probably no general answer, but will depend on the hardware (and
software) configuration used, the quality of the drivers for your
specific hardwa
On 2016-09-06 11:29, Green Dream wrote:
The whole idea doesn't sit right with me.
For one, I'm not sure I'd want any more Five Eyes entities running
Exit nodes. Most embassies are already a haven for espionage activity.
You'd pretty much have to assume they'd be sniffing the exit traffic.
All
11 matches
Mail list logo