On Mon, Oct 08, 2012 at 11:37:54AM +0200, [email protected] wrote 4.3K bytes in 
109 lines about:
: The Commission is committed to maintaining the open and neutral character of 
the Internet. At the same time the Commission strictly respects the legislation 
on the protection of personal data. The Commission's public consultation on 
‘specific aspects of transparency, traffic management and switching in an Open 
Internet’ is open to everyone. The Commission understands and respects that 
citizens may prefer to stay anonymous when accessing websites hosted on Europa.
: 
: Nevertheless, the Commission has the duty to take all the necessary measures 
to ensure a high rate of availability of its websites for all citizens. The 
Commission therefore needs to ensure the reliability and security of its 
networks and websites (and those it manages for other institutions) against 
(cyber-)attacks. In this context the Commission takes all the measures deemed 
necessary to mitigate risks and counteract attacks that occur, taking account 
of the technical specificities of the latter.
: 
: Personal data of respondents to the Commission's public consultation is 
strictly protected in line with EU data protection legislation. For 
transparency purposes the responses to the public consultation questionnaire 
will be published. However, all respondents have the possibility to indicate 
after each question, whether their response contains confidential information. 
If the respondent mentions that the answer is confidential, it will not be 
published.
: 

Thanks for sharing the response.

Can they share the data about 'cyber-attacks' and why Tor is chosen as
a technology to be blocked? I'm interested in learning the details of
quantity and quality of attacks via Tor against the Europa infrastructure.

My guess is they don't have any data and just bought some software or hired a
3rd party to 'protect' their sites. This protection includes a category
called 'proxies' which is selected by default. Within this 'proxies'
category are some long-running Tor exit relays. There was a period of
time, short as it was, where they didn't block Tor exit relays. Can they
share the details of attacks seen, if any, during this period?

How do they handle botnets and the infected computers of European citizens
trying access their site?

Ironically, they're all about an open Internet so long as this doesn't
inconvenience them. 'Cyber-attacks' are the official reason China, Iran,
Burma, and others censor their Internet in order to protect their
citizenry.

-- 
Andrew
http://tpo.is/contact
pgp 0x6B4D6475
_______________________________________________
tor-talk mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk

Reply via email to