On 30.03.2021 21:38, Petrusko wrote:
Ouch, this config looks like not so cool...
I see on Metrics the ipv6 choosen by Tor process, is now on :
"Unreachable OR Addresses"
From:
https://www.mail-archive.com/tor-relays@lists.torproject.org/msg17760.html
8<
In short, with this new feature, speci
On 30.03.2021 22:57, to...@protonmail.com wrote:
Dear Petrusco,
I have had success putting that file in /etc/tor where the torrc is:
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 17551 Oct 29 18:03 tor-exit-notice.html
Don't forget to change your line in the torrc to tell it where you
moved the file. i.e.:
DirPortFro
On 31.03.2021 18:35, Cristiano Kubiaki Gomes wrote:
Hi there,
O noticed many ssh requests to my Debian VM running a Relay and I am
wondering if this is normal or if this is happening only with me.
Anyone else see this ssh attemptives? Is it normal?
Yes.
sshd[27004]: Failed password for root fr
On 31.03.2021 18:09, gi vi an wrote:
does bridge require static or dynamic ip?
If it only changes every few weeks, you can work with DynDNS.
If you are only online for a few hours or your dyn IP keeps changing,
check out Tor snowflake.
https://support.torproject.org/censorship/what-is-snowfl
With German DSL providers you get a new IP each day.
My OBFS4 at home makes does about 100gb each day.
> Am 01.04.2021 um 09:05 schrieb Eddie :
>
> But one that keeps changing IP will get very little, if any, traffic, based
> on how bridge information is distributed.
>
> Cheers.
>
>> On 3/3
Move SSH from port 22
Certificate only, deny passwords gets rid of most of this from the kiddies
From: tor-relays On Behalf Of
Cristiano Kubiaki Gomes
Sent: 31 March 2021 17:36
To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
Subject: [tor-relays] Many SSH requests
Hi there,
O noticed many ssh re
Hi,
no, OVH is the second most commonly used hosting provider, another
relay hosted there would hurt the network more than it would help:
https://metrics.torproject.org/bubbles.html#as
We need to make the network as diverse as possible, in order to make
it as hard as possible for law enforcement
On 2021-03-31 23:44, Eddie wrote:
But one that keeps changing IP will get very little, if any, traffic,
based on how bridge information is distributed.
it makes sense, so i can opt for static ip with isp (it comes at rxtra
cost, i think)
do i have to ask anything more about static ip?
Che
Thank you for the explanation.
I also found this (old) article that explains the lifecycle of a new relay
https://blog.torproject.org/lifecycle-new-relay
I just set up my first Relay and soon it will be helping the Tor network.
With time I will be able to start others.
All the best!
Em qui., 1
But one that keeps changing IP will get very little, if any, traffic,
based on how bridge information is distributed.
Cheers.
On 3/31/2021 2:19 PM, Volker Mink wrote:
Bridge does not require static ip. You can run one at home.
More than one —> use different ports
Am 31.03.2021 um 22:14 schri
Sounds good. If you still can't get your relay to have an uptime
longer than eighteen hours, feel free to reach out directly to me and
I can help address that. The non-exit relay I'm running from home has
an uptime greater than eighteen, so we at least have a "reference
implementation" to work with
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