Zack Weinberg wrote:
> Relay diversity and client diversity are two different things. Last I heard
People who run relays usually started out as people running clients.
They liked tor and decided to help out by running a relay, *too*. Do you
really believe they would choose to install some
Relay diversity and client diversity are two different things. Last I heard
it was a bad idea to run a relay on the same computer as a client, so I
don't think Tor Browser for server OSes like Solaris is a great use of
developer effort.
Windows is certainly the highest-value target for client dive
Firstly, a note of caution: I am not affiliated with the Tor project.
Scott Bennett:
Duncan wrote:
In theory hot-patching kernels is a great idea.
However, they're technically not loading a new kernel. Something like
kexec in theory lets one load a new kernel.
Furthermore, these hot-patchin
Duncan wrote:
> In theory hot-patching kernels is a great idea.
>
> However, they're technically not loading a new kernel. Something like
> kexec in theory lets one load a new kernel.
>
> Furthermore, these hot-patching programs usually only support Linux. If
> we want to increase the diversity