This email you sent appears to be completely empty.
Perhaps you sent before you finished typing?
On Apr 4, 2016 4:51 PM, "runner7272" wrote:
>
>
>
>
> Sent from my Sprint Phone.
>
> ___
> tor-relays mailing list
> tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
> http
You have to add the line StrictNodes 1. Not just exit nodes.
On Mar 26, 2016 2:35 PM, wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> I have edited my torrc file on my Tor Client to exclude several
> countries, but I keep getting the United Kingdom in my pathway. My
> torrc file is b
. The person you talked to must have learned on his own.
On Feb 28, 2016 5:37 PM, "Jesse V" wrote:
> On 02/28/2016 11:42 AM, Jamis Hartley wrote:
> > Because the support people in the call center are not IT people. They
> > don't understand computers and were never tr
knowledge of the tech behind it.
On Feb 28, 2016 9:38 AM, "john saylor" wrote:
> On 02/28/16 02:08, Jamis Hartley wrote:
> > I seriously doubt it's hostility.
>
> you may be right. as i said, it was only speculation on my part ...
>
> but why didn'
I seriously doubt it's hostility. The likeliest thing is they were looking
to stop people from using Tor to bypass country restrictions. So when they
found a public list of all the Tor nodes, they blocked them all. Not
realizing that only a few of them are actually capable of proxying.
For them to
You can contact your ISP and ask for a static IP. It's possible they may
charge you for one, but it's also possible they may not. My ISP for example
allows me one static IP for free. I use that for my Tor relay, and it works
great.
On Thu, Feb 25, 2016 at 9:15 PM, wrote:
> Hello,
>
> i have been