Jamie McCarthy wrote:
> These don't look like official URLs, so if they go dead in a year
> I guess I'll ask or-talk again.
>
> This might be more efficient for my code than the DNSEL, so I might
> end up using it despite the false positives/negatives.
>
>
Hi there,
I'd really like to encourag
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Olaf Selke) writes:
> you can obtain the list in plain txt format updated every 5
> minutes from Tor Network Status sites located in
>
> the US
> http://torstatus.kgprog.com/ip_list_exit.php
>
> or
>
> the Old Europe
> http://torstatus.blutmagie.de/ip_list_exit.php
Thanks, O
On Mon, May 5, 2008 at 10:32 AM, Olaf Selke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ...
> you can obtain the list in plain txt format updated every 5 minutes ...
note that this still entails the other problems mentioned above: nodes
which exit from a different IP address than they listen on for OR
traffic w
Jamie McCarthy wrote:
I'm looking for a list of Tor exit nodes, so I can block them from
posting to my website. What's the easiest way to obtain that list
and keep it up-to-date?
you can obtain the list in plain txt format updated every 5
minutes from Tor Network Status sites located in
th
On Mon, May 5, 2008 at 9:38 AM, Jamie McCarthy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ...
> I'm looking for a list of Tor exit nodes, so I can block them from
> posting to my website. What's the easiest way to obtain that list
> and keep it up-to-date?
use the Tor DNSEL implementation. it is up to date
Hello,
Please forgive me for not doing more thorough research before
emailing. I'm not part of the Tor community and not really
interested in getting too into it. I'm just looking for some quick
advice. I've installed Tor on several machines, fiddled with its
config and log files, and read most
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