Roger et al, I'm interested in something like onion-pi to be a Tor relay.
Is there something with enough COU to be viable? I know nothing about
this embedded scene.
-V
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Martin Kepplinger:
> Am 2014-06-29 08:57, schrieb Roger Dingledine:
> > On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 10:11:24PM +0200, Moritz Bartl wrote:
> >> On 06/27/2014 09:44 PM, Virgil Griffith wrote:
> >>> What is the current state of the art on this, and if it is ready for
> >>> larger deployment want to buy ab
Roger wrote:
> And the onionpi boxes don't have enough cpu to be a useful relay.
I'm not sure what the definition of 'useful relay' is, but I am running
an exit relay with 900KB/s and between 1000-1500 consensus weight. This
is the limit for the pi, but definitively above the 100KB/s I read
somewh
Am 2014-06-29 08:57, schrieb Roger Dingledine:
> On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 10:11:24PM +0200, Moritz Bartl wrote:
>> On 06/27/2014 09:44 PM, Virgil Griffith wrote:
>>> What is the current state of the art on this, and if it is ready for
>>> larger deployment want to buy about 50-100 of them.
>>
>> In
On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 10:11:24PM +0200, Moritz Bartl wrote:
> On 06/27/2014 09:44 PM, Virgil Griffith wrote:
> > What is the current state of the art on this, and if it is ready for
> > larger deployment want to buy about 50-100 of them.
>
> In my eyes, an access point that has a captive portal
On Mon, Jun 09, 2014 at 05:26:28PM -0700, Virgil Griffith wrote:
> I propose the following system for harnessing "warm glow" and "reputation"
> for Tor relay operators.
Hi Virgil,
I agree with your direction here, and I'd love to see some more work
on it.
In fact, the "per relay" page idea is ne