One year ago we were trying the same in the Asia region with DigitalOcean. We 
did not get a lot of traffic because of the few tor relays / bandwidth 
authorities in Asia. At the moment your best chance in helping Tor with 
bandwidth is buying a server in Europe or parts of the USA. If you have really 
good patience try your style in DownUnder or any near Asia country. Japan has a 
lot of cheap servers and is near you, at least its nearer than Germany where I 
am sitting :)

niftybunny

PS: Congratulations on beating the USA with DataCaps and ridiculous DSL prices 
:/

“For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our 
citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'”
--David Cameron, 2015




> On 24. Aug 2017, at 08:32, Paul Templeton <p...@coffswifi.net> wrote:
> 
> OVH has this in AU
> 
> 5.9
> For security reasons, OVH reserves the right to proceed with the immediate 
> suspension without 
> notice, of any Server on which there is a public service Proxy, IRC, VPN or 
> TOR which is available free 
> of charge or for a fee, and for which OVH has knowledge of its fraudulent or 
> illegal misuse.
> 
>> with Tor's overall architecture, does it really make sense to
>> route e.g. EU clients exiting to EU destinations,
> 
> True - Wanted to add to the diversity in location and OS.
> 
> Will look at other jurisdictions for better service... Still looking but so 
> far all have data caps. 
> 
> I really want a decent exit node here in AU but getting perplexed. 
> 
> I'll sleep on it...
> 
> Paul
> _______________________________________________
> tor-relays mailing list
> tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
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