It would seem to make a difference if you are in one country and the company is in another and the legal action is in another.Robert
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Hello.
It's a normal behaviour for a new relay. The bwauths will measure your
bandwidth remotely in the next few days, and the consensus weight will be
updated.
Check this blog post for more details:
https://blog.torproject.org/blog/lifecycle-of-a-new-relay .
On November 6, 2015 5:29:12 PM
Hello
A few days ago I started to run a Tor non-exit relay.
Fingerprint: F6D5B2319748E8524478766310FD0E65F612E06A
My internet connection speed 100Mbps down, 100Mbps up.
(My relay runs from 16 to 18 hours a day.)
But my advertised bandwidth just 66.56KB/s, and consensus weight 23 (Atlas).
My relay
Is there a procedure I should follow if a relay has been seized by the
police? Do DirAuths typically do something in cases where a relay is
seized? I just got a message from NQHost stating that "We have received
several police inquires and court order to seize your VPS. ". This affects
relay
Because you lost control of your exit relay, you should ask DirAuths to
reject/refuse/ban your exit.
On 11/06/2015 05:05 PM, Kevin Beranek wrote:
> Is there a procedure I should follow if a relay has been seized by the
> police? Do DirAuths typically do something in cases where a relay is
>
Is there a better list than this one for doing so? I can't find a list
that seems more appropriate on
https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo. Or do I have to
email the DirAuths directly? If so, where do I find the addresses to use?
On Fri, Nov 6, 2015 at 8:20 AM, justaguy
Well, of course they take a dump of the RAM and stop it afterwards :-)
Am 06.11.2015 um 21:18 schrieb Josef Stautner:
> They stop it, make a dump of the RAM and save the hard drive.
>
> Am 06.11.2015 um 20:58 schrieb I:
>> How can they seize a virtual server?
>> Which country are the police from?
They stop it, make a dump of the RAM and save the hard drive.
Am 06.11.2015 um 20:58 schrieb I:
> How can they seize a virtual server?
> Which country are the police from?
>
> Robert
>
>
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> On 7 Nov 2015, at 07:20, Josef Stautner wrote:
>
> Well, of course they take a dump of the RAM and stop it afterwards :-)
The directory authorities are generally more concerned when they *don't* stop
it afterwards, and instead keep running it, perhaps with extra logging,
Thanks everyone. I sent an email to all of the DirAuth operators.
On Fri, Nov 6, 2015 at 12:41 PM, Tim Wilson-Brown - teor wrote:
>
> On 7 Nov 2015, at 07:20, Josef Stautner wrote:
>
> Well, of course they take a dump of the RAM and stop it afterwards
and here's the URL I spoke of:
https://atlas.torproject.org/#search/flag:Authority
Sorry, I forgot to paste it in the email.
2015-11-06 18:16 GMT+01:00 DerTor Steher :
> Hey Kevin,
>
> under the following URL you can find all authorities with their email
> adresses stated
Which police?
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Kevin Beranek:
> Is there a better list than this one for doing so? I can't find a list
> that seems more appropriate on
> https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo. Or do I have to
> email the DirAuths directly? If so, where do I find the addresses to use?
That would be
Russian, I assume because the relay was in Russia.
On Fri, Nov 6, 2015 at 12:49 PM, I wrote:
> Which police?
>
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>
> On 7 Nov 2015, at 08:36, Kevin Beranek wrote:
>
> Russian, I assume because the relay was in Russia.
Russia has over 200 mutual legal assistance treaties.
Source: http://www.mlat.is/p/query-interface.html (requires JavaScript)
Sometimes it's impossible to tell where the
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