On 14 Aug 2014, at 22:00, Alexander wrote:
>> On 2014-08-14 10:25, Mike Cardwell wrote:
>>
>> On the other hand. It costs you nothing to stick a bitcoin
>> address in a config file to find out.
>
> Not being a lawyer, does accepting money for running a Tor relay make it
> a commercial operation
Looks like it. Does this only apply for exit nodes?
On Thursday, August 14, 2014, blahu77 . wrote:
> I was thinking about it and I will stick torproject's wallet -
> 1K7P2FovDXyyEuZc87YUgPtmR34P62MYmn
> from: https://www.torproject.org/donate/donate.html.en >>
> https://bitpay.com/invoice?id=X
I was thinking about it and I will stick torproject's wallet -
1K7P2FovDXyyEuZc87YUgPtmR34P62MYmn
from: https://www.torproject.org/donate/donate.html.en >>
https://bitpay.com/invoice?id=XzYL2D1neP496n79LyTSV4
Is that correct one?
Thanks,
-mateusz
On 14 August 2014 20:24, threehundredthirtytwof
Good point...
Sent from my iPhone
On Thursday, August 14, 2014, Alexander Dietrich
wrote:
> On 2014-08-14 10:25, Mike Cardwell wrote:
>
> On the other hand. It costs you nothing to stick a bitcoin
>> address in a config file to find out.
>>
>
> Not being a lawyer, does accepting money for runn
On 2014-08-14 10:25, Mike Cardwell wrote:
On the other hand. It costs you nothing to stick a bitcoin
address in a config file to find out.
Not being a lawyer, does accepting money for running a Tor relay make it
a commercial operation (in some countries) and put you in a different
legal posi
That depends entirely on how much people donate. At the bottom
of their front page it currently states that 335.26 mBTC have
been donated so far. Ie, a third of a bitcoin. It's impossible
to predict how much might be donated in future.
On the other hand. It costs you nothing to stick a bitcoin
add