On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 4:20 PM, Mike Hearn wrote:
> +Roger, as I'm curious as to the rationale.
There was a pretty big thread debate a couple years back about
people only wanting to offer cleartext ports being seen as
(whether falsely or not) doing it purely so they can cheaply
steal content/tok
Hello,
The FreedomBox project [1] is planning to include Tor in the upcoming
0.2 release. FreedomBox is intended to be used as an always-on server,
so its Tor node has been configured as a bridge relay.
There is also a need for FreedomBoxes to be able to find each other
regardless of location or
On 3/19/14, Moritz Bartl wrote:
> You should add the torproject repository, and then just let it upgrade
> whenever there is a new version. There's no need to reboot or wait,
> having the upgrade process restart the service is fine. Your relay will
> not lose its flags during short downtimes like
Hi,
My last mail should have been sent to Moritz not to the list, my apologies.
--
Mit freundlichen Grüssen / Sincerely yours
Sebastian Urbach
--
Those who would give up essential Liberty,
to purchase a little temporary Safety,
deserve neither Liberty
Hi Moritz,
Ich hatte Andrew im Januar auf diesen Artikel aufmerksam gemacht und da er
deutschsprachig ist hattest du dem Kollegen Böhm dazu was geschrieben (ich
war CC oder BCC)
Wenn ich das richtig erinnere dann sagte er das er die Spiegel Kollegen in
HH um Änderung des Bildes gebeten habe.
Hi Zenaan,
You should add the torproject repository, and then just let it upgrade
whenever there is a new version. There's no need to reboot or wait,
having the upgrade process restart the service is fine. Your relay will
not lose its flags during short downtimes like that.
--
Moritz Bartl
https
Declining dramatically
https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/90743CFA1B93295B9334CC0C625D22990AABA25F
vs
https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/CC2F7C6ED12B67CB3882B98213E02DEF2CB82293
that is holding steady
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Delton Barnes:
> George Kadianakis:
> > You can use git master or pip to upgrade to 0.2.7. We have also
> > notified the obfsproxy Debian maintainers and we should soon have
> > obfsproxy-0.2.7 packages ready (we will send an email to this list
> > when they are ready).
>
> Looks like obfsproxy-0.
> If I'm not mistaken, you need to open two of the ports 80, 443 and 6667
> to gain the Exit flag
It's in dir-spec.txt as such. Probably under some rationale of
making nodes most widely beneficial. I'd think soaking up btc
traffic would be useful, if exit traffic stats supported that
need... is it
George Kadianakis:
> You can use git master or pip to upgrade to 0.2.7. We have also
> notified the obfsproxy Debian maintainers and we should soon have
> obfsproxy-0.2.7 packages ready (we will send an email to this list
> when they are ready).
Looks like obfsproxy-0.2.7-1 is now available in uns
+Roger, as I'm curious as to the rationale.
On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 9:12 PM, grarpamp wrote:
> > If I'm not mistaken, you need to open two of the ports 80, 443 and 6667
> > to gain the Exit flag
>
> It's in dir-spec.txt as such. Probably under some rationale of
> making nodes most widely benefic
You should probably use the Tor project's package repository.
See this page for details:
https://www.torproject.org/docs/debian.html.en#ubuntu
Best regards,
Alexander
---
PGP Key: 0xC55A356B | https://dietrich.cx/pgp
On 2014-03-18 13:57, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
Currently running Debian's stable
Currently running Debian's stable/wheezy version of tor which 0.2.3.25
on my first relay, gracemissionstor.
I discovered the torproject deb repository here (of course):
https://www.torproject.org/docs/debian
The following google search:
debian upgrade site:torproject.org
didn't give much.
But th
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