Simply put… if the data that is hosted on the sites aforementioned then cough 
up the damn space and host it. Data space is cheap as hell these days, parse it 
and get the hell on with it already.


*Disclaimer*
not meant to single out any one party in this conversation but the whole 
subject all together. Need someone to help mirror the data ? I may or may not 
be able to assist with that. Provide the space to upload it to and the 
direction to the data you want. But beyond all that. This subject is plainly 
just off topic.


> On Dec 21, 2016, at 22:16, Royce Williams <ro...@techsolvency.com> wrote:
> 
> On Tue, Dec 20, 2016 at 7:08 AM, Royce Williams <ro...@techsolvency.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> [snip]
> 
>> IMO, *operational, politics-free* discussion of items like these would
>> also be on topic for NANOG:
>> 
>> - Some *operational* workarounds for country-wide blocking of
>> Facebook, Whatsapp, and Twitter [1], or Signal [2]
> 
> [snip]
> 
>> 2. 
>> http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2016/12/20/world/middleeast/ap-ml-egypt-app-blocked.html
> 
> Steering things back towards the operational, the makers of Signal
> announced today [1] an update to Signal with a workaround for the
> blocking that I noted earlier. Support in iOS is still in beta.
> 
> The technique (which was new to me) is called 'domain fronting' [2].
> It works by distributing TLS-based components among domains for which
> blocking would cause wide-sweeping collateral damage if blocked (such
> as Google, Amazon S3, Akamai, etc.), making blocking less attractive.
> Since it's TLS, the Signal connections cannot be differentiated from
> other services in those domains.
> 
> Signal's implementation of domain fronting is currently limited to
> countries where the blocking has been observed, but their post says
> that they're ramping up to make it available more broadly, and to
> automatically enable the feature when non-local phone numbers travel
> into areas subject to blocking.
> 
> The cited domain-fronting paper [2] was co-authored by David Fifield,
> who has worked on nmap and Tor.
> 
> Royce
> 
> 1. https://whispersystems.org/blog/doodles-stickers-censorship/
> 2. http://www.icir.org/vern/papers/meek-PETS-2015.pdf


-- 
 Jason Hellenthal
 JJH48-ARIN




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