If you have fiber to the home or another symmetrical speed broadband
connection (like some wireless ISPs like Webpass), you may have a lot of
upstream speed. In this case it's perfect for Tor relays. If you do,
invest in a good router with a big enough NAT table if you don't have
one, flash cus
Does it pull the correct Torrc file?
> Am 25.04.2019 um 23:43 schrieb to...@protonmail.com:
>
> I need to move to a new router, which, unlike the old Verizon home router,
> doesn't have a quick DMZ host to which I attach the tor telay's local ip
> address. So I think I need to do port forwardi
On Thu, 25 Apr 2019 21:43:33 +
to...@protonmail.com wrote:
> I need to move to a new router, which, unlike the old Verizon home router,
> doesn't have a quick DMZ host to which I attach the tor telay's local ip
> address. So I think I need to do port forwarding, and for that what rules do
to...@protonmail.com:
> I need to move to a new router, which, unlike the old Verizon home
> router, doesn't have a quick DMZ host to which I attach the tor
> telay's local ip address. So I think I need to do port forwarding,
> and for that what rules do I need? My torrc config has: ControlPort
I need to move to a new router, which, unlike the old Verizon home router,
doesn't have a quick DMZ host to which I attach the tor telay's local ip
address. So I think I need to do port forwarding, and for that what rules do I
need? My torrc config has:
ControlPort 9052
ORPort 8443
DirPort 8080
FYI
nusenu wrote (2019-04-20):
> Hi there,
>
> we noticed your tor relays and were wondering whether you
> submitted your research to the Tor Research Safety Board
> for review since your email address and amount of relays suggests
> you are doing research.
>
> https://research.torproject.org/sa