Roger Dingledine a...@mit.edu writes:
On Thu, Mar 13, 2014 at 10:21:38PM +, George Kadianakis wrote:
From {2}, we see that the Tor network has 6000MiB/s advertised guard
bandwidth (orange line), but supposedly is only using the 3500MiB/s
(yellow line). This means, that supposedly we are
I think I'll have more to say later, but...
On Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 11:36 AM, George Kadianakis
desnac...@riseup.net wrote:
1.3. Age of guard as a factor on guard probabilities
By increasing the guard rotation period we also increase the lack
of clients for young guards since clients
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Hi all,
(Please let me know if this belongs on tor-talk instead of here.)
I'm working on a messaging app that uses Tor hidden services to
provide unlinkability (from the point of view of a network observer)
between users and their contacts. Users
On 26/03/14 16:54, Michael Rogers wrote:
Hi all,
(Please let me know if this belongs on tor-talk instead of here.)
I'm working on a messaging app that uses Tor hidden services to
provide unlinkability (from the point of view of a network observer)
between users and their contacts. Users
On Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 11:57:08AM -0500, Nicholas Hopper wrote:
We can try to mitigate this phenomenon by giving higher priority to
young guards to be picked as guards:
I'm pretty sure this section has it backwards from what was the intent
of the discussion of guard age at the dev
On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 3:41 PM, Mike Perry mikepe...@torproject.org
wrote:
For control, it would be nice to know what we would be giving up if we
used that same T=2000 cutoff with three guards and compare that to
T=2000 with just one guard. Is it easy for you to rerun just that
comparison