[tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Conrad Rockenhaus
Hello,

I was going to ask someone off-list, but the amount of abuse and DCMA
complaints I have received now have been so much that I have decided that
the best action to take is to set an exit policy. I run a couple of exit
nodes and I have people apparently using them to torrent, which we ask
people politely not to do through Torbut the policy gets ignored I
guess. Anyway, I'm receiving a sufficient amount of complaints to where I'm
worried that my service may be terminated unless I take action, which would
affect the greater good.

So the question is - I run the default exit policy. I don't like being the
arbiter of what goes through and what doesn't. Is it okay, ethically, from
a free speech standpoint, to reach this point to where we say "we need to
block this content from transversing my node" in response to legal
complaints from others? Are others implementing these blocks and do you
feel that such a block doesn't violate any ethical norm to provide
uncensored access to the Internet?

I'm just curious on what thoughts on this are. I know how to technically
perform the block, I guess I feel like we're one of the last bastions
against censorship on the Internet and people do torrent legitimate stuff.
I don't consider pirating Fallout 4, The Elder Scrolls V, Sweetbitter, and
The Evil Within 2 to be protected speech FYI... my worry is just blocking
the legitimate uses of bittorrent.

Thanks,

Conrad Rockenhaus
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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Iain Learmonth
Hi,

On 15/07/18 17:23, Conrad Rockenhaus wrote:
> I'm just curious on what thoughts on this are. I know how to technically
> perform the block, I guess I feel like we're one of the last bastions
> against censorship on the Internet and people do torrent legitimate
> stuff. I don't consider pirating Fallout 4, The Elder Scrolls V,
> Sweetbitter, and The Evil Within 2 to be protected speech FYI... my
> worry is just blocking the legitimate uses of bittorrent.

Tor is designed in such a way that you can separately decide whether or
not you want to contribute to the network, and also whether or not you
are willing to deal with abuse notices. This is configured via exit
policies.

If abuse is threatening the continued running of your relay, then you
should take action to avoid not having a relay anymore.

There is a page on the wiki about various reduced exit policies that
will reduce the amount of abuse notices your relay may attract:

https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/doc/ReducedExitPolicy

Exit policies are the way to configure this. Please do not try to filter
specific uses of a protocol using DPI. Application-level
filtering/firewalls is a good way to get the BadExit flag.

Thanks,
Iain.



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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Conrad Rockenhaus
Hello,

> Tor is designed in such a way that you can separately decide whether or
> not you want to contribute to the network, and also whether or not you
> are willing to deal with abuse notices. This is configured via exit
> policies.

I never said that, I asked if people felt it was ethical to still
consider themselves contributing to "Full Free Speech" by running the
default exit policy then to start deviating from the default exit
policy and blocking items such as access to bittorrent. Basically, my
concern is I see a legitimate use of bittorrent, which is why I never
blocked it on my exits. Now I'm being forced to. I'm asking if other
people view themselves as "Full Free Speech" still or are we starting
to arbitrate free speech?


> If abuse is threatening the continued running of your relay, then you
> should take action to avoid not having a relay anymore.

I am, but I'm in an ethical quandary. Do I like watching scat porn?
No, but I'll defend your right to the death to watch it.


> There is a page on the wiki about various reduced exit policies that
> will reduce the amount of abuse notices your relay may attract:

Again, we can answer the technical questions all day long, but it's
not answering my true question here.

>
> https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/doc/ReducedExitPolicy
>
> Exit policies are the way to configure this. Please do not try to filter
> specific uses of a protocol using DPI. Application-level
> filtering/firewalls is a good way to get the BadExit flag.

Never thought of doing it that way. I do business by the book, what
I'm questioning is am I right to call myself a Defender of the Faith
by the book or should I try fighting this or what?

Thanks,

Conrad
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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Nagaev Boris
On Sun, Jul 15, 2018 at 12:23 PM, Conrad Rockenhaus
 wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I was going to ask someone off-list, but the amount of abuse and DCMA
> complaints I have received now have been so much that I have decided that
> the best action to take is to set an exit policy. I run a couple of exit
> nodes and I have people apparently using them to torrent, which we ask
> people politely not to do through Torbut the policy gets ignored I
> guess. Anyway, I'm receiving a sufficient amount of complaints to where I'm
> worried that my service may be terminated unless I take action, which would
> affect the greater good.
>
> So the question is - I run the default exit policy. I don't like being the
> arbiter of what goes through and what doesn't. Is it okay, ethically, from a
> free speech standpoint, to reach this point to where we say "we need to
> block this content from transversing my node" in response to legal
> complaints from others? Are others implementing these blocks and do you feel
> that such a block doesn't violate any ethical norm to provide uncensored
> access to the Internet?
>
> I'm just curious on what thoughts on this are. I know how to technically
> perform the block, I guess I feel like we're one of the last bastions
> against censorship on the Internet and people do torrent legitimate stuff. I
> don't consider pirating Fallout 4, The Elder Scrolls V, Sweetbitter, and The
> Evil Within 2 to be protected speech FYI... my worry is just blocking the
> legitimate uses of bittorrent.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Conrad Rockenhaus
>
> ___
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> tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
> https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
>

I think that modern copyright lays violate non aggression principle,
which includes free speech.

Rationale. Skip this paragraph if you already agree with the above
statement. When a person buys a hard drive they become an owner of it.
Of all its parts, including parts happen to be Fallout 4, The Elder
Scrolls V, Sweetbitter, and The Evil Within 2. Another person
establishes a private communication channel between their hard drive
and the first person's hard drive. The line between them is private,
hard drives are private property of these two people => any
intervention of force into this voluntarily interaction is an
aggression.

If one agrees that copyright laws are incompatible with free speech
and are immoral, then he has to admit that all solutions including Tor
are technical, not fundamental. Thus the "quality" of a solution is
based not on morality but on technical properties (e.g. how much data
is transmitted, how many people can use it, etc). Free speech
considerations are not a measure at this point. If to continue
providing the service the node has to drop some connections is the
lesser evil to be accepted. You can compare it with treating an
incurable disease: you can not fix the problem in a right way but you
can reduce the suffering and increase life time of the patient.

-- 
Best regards,
Boris Nagaev
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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Matt Traudt


On 07/15/2018 01:21 PM, Conrad Rockenhaus wrote:
> Hello,
> 
>> Tor is designed in such a way that you can separately decide whether or
>> not you want to contribute to the network, and also whether or not you
>> are willing to deal with abuse notices. This is configured via exit
>> policies.
> 
> I never said that, I asked if people felt it was ethical to still
> consider themselves contributing to "Full Free Speech" by running the
> default exit policy then to start deviating from the default exit
> policy and blocking items such as access to bittorrent. Basically, my
> concern is I see a legitimate use of bittorrent, which is why I never
> blocked it on my exits. Now I'm being forced to. I'm asking if other
> people view themselves as "Full Free Speech" still or are we starting
> to arbitrate free speech?
> 

Even when using the default exit policy you are blocking some ports. For
example, SMTP on port 25.

There are legitimate reasons to use port 25. You're already blocking
those users that want to use 25. If you choose to define supporting Full
Free Speech as allowing all traffic, you already stopped supporting FFS.

Personally I'd rather support 99.9% of Tor users (made up percentage)
forever than support 100% of Tor users for a limited time.

I don't run the default exit policy on all my relays and I don't see
anything wrong with my decision.

Hope that helps. Thanks for running a relay(s).

Matt

PS: for reference, the default exit policy is as follows according to
the Tor manual. https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-manual.html.en

reject *:25
reject *:119
reject *:135-139
reject *:445
reject *:563
reject *:1214
reject *:4661-4666
reject *:6346-6429
reject *:6699
reject *:6881-6999
accept *:*

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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Roger Dingledine
On Sun, Jul 15, 2018 at 05:53:13PM +0100, Iain Learmonth wrote:
> Exit policies are the way to configure this. Please do not try to filter
> specific uses of a protocol using DPI. Application-level
> filtering/firewalls is a good way to get the BadExit flag.

I know this wasn't the original question, but I think it will be useful
to add:

In addition, though the line isn't black-and-white, declining to handle
traffic based on destination IP address or port is more on the "address"
side of things, whereas DPI by payload is more on the "content" side
of things. And the closer you are to making decisions based on content,
the closer you are to wiretapping, and also the closer you are to taking
responsibility for the content that you do "decide" to let through. So
it is a bad move from a legal perspective to go that route.

As for the ethics question, I think everybody who is offering exit
capacity of any sort is doing a good deed for the world, and people
contribute according to what their circumstances allow, and to me that's
very reasonable.

--Roger

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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Mirimir
On 07/15/2018 09:23 AM, Conrad Rockenhaus wrote:



> I'm just curious on what thoughts on this are. I know how to technically
> perform the block, I guess I feel like we're one of the last bastions
> against censorship on the Internet and people do torrent legitimate stuff.
> I don't consider pirating Fallout 4, The Elder Scrolls V, Sweetbitter, and
> The Evil Within 2 to be protected speech FYI... my worry is just blocking
> the legitimate uses of bittorrent.

I think that you'll find blocking bittorrent to be harder than expected.
Modern protocols are well-encrypted, and DPI doesn't really touch them.




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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Conrad Rockenhaus
On Sun, Jul 15, 2018 at 12:36 PM, Nagaev Boris  wrote:


> I think that modern copyright lays violate non aggression principle,
> which includes free speech.

As I agree, which is why I typically ignored such threats until my
provider started enforcing said threats.

> Rationale. Skip this paragraph if you already agree with the above
> statement. When a person buys a hard drive they become an owner of it.
> Of all its parts, including parts happen to be Fallout 4, The Elder
> Scrolls V, Sweetbitter, and The Evil Within 2. Another person
> establishes a private communication channel between their hard drive
> and the first person's hard drive. The line between them is private,
> hard drives are private property of these two people => any
> intervention of force into this voluntarily interaction is an
> aggression.
>
> If one agrees that copyright laws are incompatible with free speech
> and are immoral, then he has to admit that all solutions including Tor
> are technical, not fundamental. Thus the "quality" of a solution is
> based not on morality but on technical properties (e.g. how much data
> is transmitted, how many people can use it, etc). Free speech
> considerations are not a measure at this point. If to continue
> providing the service the node has to drop some connections is the
> lesser evil to be accepted. You can compare it with treating an
> incurable disease: you can not fix the problem in a right way but you
> can reduce the suffering and increase life time of the patient.
>

Thank you for your very thoughtful answer. I just implemented the
first choice in the ReducedExit policies in my exits to try to block
the bittorrent threat from taking service away from everyone else.
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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-15 Thread Conrad Rockenhaus
On Sun, Jul 15, 2018 at 2:18 PM, Mirimir  wrote:
>
> I think that you'll find blocking bittorrent to be harder than expected.
> Modern protocols are well-encrypted, and DPI doesn't really touch them.
>

DPI was never even under consideration. I wasn't comfortable calling
it "Free Speech" when I was indeed limiting access to something by
implementing an exit policy. I forgot that the default policy in
itself limits SMTP, and other things and my comfort level increased.

-Conrad
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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-16 Thread grarpamp
If operators are taking flak from their upstream,
and they want to carry the traffic for reasons,
before giving in and deploying exit policy, see what options
are available to SWIP the address space to you and thus
eat a lot of the complaints from the internet yourself.
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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-16 Thread tor

grarpamp  wrote:

> If operators are taking flak from their upstream,
> and they want to carry the traffic for reasons,
> before giving in and deploying exit policy, see what options
> are available to SWIP the address space to you and thus
> eat a lot of the complaints from the internet yourself.

What he said, but adding to this -

There are not many exit operators who will be in a position to 
actually own their own IP space and therefore have it SWIPed to them 
100%, with nobody else getting abuse complaints. The more SWIP you can 
get pointed at you, the better, but unfortunately something like 
getting colo space and a /28 doesn't necessarily get you that.


The automated DCMA complaints are actually an abuse of the recipient's 
email system because the goons sending them do not change what they 
are doing (or in fact, respond) when you ask them to stop emailing 
you.


For those in a position to run exit policies that might result in 
abusive automated DCMA emails, it is entirely within the realm of 
reasonable to build email server filters to reject those at the SMTP 
envelope (refusal to even accept the emails). You'll also probably be 
making a filter that outright rejects Base-64 emails from that sender 
(ie: requiring all abuse@ emails to be submitted plain text or HTML).








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Re: [tor-relays] Question regarding ethical torrent blocking

2018-07-20 Thread torix
Dear Conrad,

It seems to me that there is an ethical difference between being forced to cut 
off torrent traffic and cutting off certain traffic because you object to the 
content.

--torix

Sent with [ProtonMail](https://protonmail.com) Secure Email.

‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On July 15, 2018 12:23 PM, Conrad Rockenhaus  wrote:

> Hello,
>
> I was going to ask someone off-list, but the amount of abuse and DCMA 
> complaints I have received now have been so much that I have decided that the 
> best action to take is to set an exit policy. I run a couple of exit nodes 
> and I have people apparently using them to torrent, which we ask people 
> politely not to do through Torbut the policy gets ignored I guess. 
> Anyway, I'm receiving a sufficient amount of complaints to where I'm worried 
> that my service may be terminated unless I take action, which would affect 
> the greater good.
>
> So the question is - I run the default exit policy. I don't like being the 
> arbiter of what goes through and what doesn't. Is it okay, ethically, from a 
> free speech standpoint, to reach this point to where we say "we need to block 
> this content from transversing my node" in response to legal complaints from 
> others? Are others implementing these blocks and do you feel that such a 
> block doesn't violate any ethical norm to provide uncensored access to the 
> Internet?
>
> I'm just curious on what thoughts on this are. I know how to technically 
> perform the block, I guess I feel like we're one of the last bastions against 
> censorship on the Internet and people do torrent legitimate stuff. I don't 
> consider pirating Fallout 4, The Elder Scrolls V, Sweetbitter, and The Evil 
> Within 2 to be protected speech FYI... my worry is just blocking the 
> legitimate uses of bittorrent.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Conrad Rockenhaus___
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