Zack Weinberg wrote:
> I wonder how hard it would be to have relays randomize the start point
> of their hibernation period, to stabilize the amount of available
> bandwidth over a 1-month interval...
I run my relay with a daily limit using:
AccountingStart day HH:MM
AccountingMax XXXGB
Am 02.02.2015 um 05:59 schrieb Moritz Bartl:
> The history of Tor and Freenode is quite long and we currently can't
> seem to change how they treat Tor users. Better ways could be
> implemented, but someone would have to implemented it for their homebrew
> grown IRCd.
Thanks. At least one person u
Hello,
I have a bridge up and running for about 6 months. I have two questions.
According to arm my fingerprint is
72DB4EE86C65856E3131A32D8E30EC8A2B72A73D . But if I look up
rasptorholland in globe.torproject.org I find that my fingerprint is
1BCD3EBEFE17EEB86EEDE21D5E2DB8468E2864CF . And again ac
jchase transcribed 0.6K bytes:
> Hello,
> I have a bridge up and running for about 6 months. I have two questions.
> According to arm my fingerprint is
> 72DB4EE86C65856E3131A32D8E30EC8A2B72A73D . But if I look up
> rasptorholland in globe.torproject.org I find that my fingerprint is
> 1BCD3EBEFE17
*Good evening ladies and gentleman*
I'm running a TOR Exit for a few days now (
https://globe.torproject.org/#/relay/06BA80D9E1143CFAD835442142A3FA5A1E4FD910).
I'm also using TOR ARM in order to monitor TOR's performance, log messages
and connections.
When I have a look at the connections page on
ioth.debian.org/pipermail/pkg-anonymity-tools/Week-of-Mon-20150202/001119.html
[1]: https://github.com/yawning/basket
--
♥Ⓐ isis agora lovecruft
_
OpenPGP: 4096R/0A6A58A14B5946ABDE18E207A3ADB67A2CDB8B35
Current Keys: https://blog.patternsinthevo
> writing up some short how-to on the steps you took, please?
>
> [0]:
> http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/pkg-anonymity-tools/Week-of-Mon-20150202/001119.html
> [1]: https://github.com/yawning/basket
All of obfs4proxy's dependencies are build time. The binary is
stati
On Sat, Jan 24, 2015 at 3:16 PM, cacahuatl wrote:
> Most of the network is under-utilised guards and middle nodes, hidden
> services don't stress exits, which are the limited resource.
Exits can and do serve in all the other node roles too.
I don't think there has yet been a study to determine th