Dear Keifer,
From the Tor Manual:
"MyFamily fingerprint,fingerprint,…
Declare that this Tor relay is controlled or administered by a group or
organization identical or similar to that of the other relays, defined by their
(possibly $-prefixed) identity fingerprints. This option can be repeated
My understanding is that you don’t, if you do you give the game away about your
bridge.
From: tor-relays On Behalf Of Keifer
Bly
Sent: 22 May 2020 23:24
To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
Subject: [tor-relays] How do I add relays to a "family" and what are the
benefits?
Hi all,
They can raid my home(s), it won't make it any less legal to operate
an exit node, for it's traffic I am still not responsible.
I've had run-ins with the law regarding exit nodes in the past, and
all the cases against me got dropped due to not being liable for the
traffic I have not initiated.
With a bridge, you don't want to have a MyFamily line at all, so you should be
good.
--Torix
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‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Friday, May 22, 2020 10:24 PM, Keifer Bly wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> So as I run this bridge
>
>
Thanks very much all, as bridges are meant to be kept private as possible. Thanks very much all. Sent from Mail for Windows 10 From: ger...@bulger.co.ukSent: Friday, May 22, 2020 3:49 PMTo: tor-relays@lists.torproject.orgSubject: Re: [tor-relays] How do I add relays to a "family" and what are the
Thanks for the links and reply, I appreciate it, that answers my question on
web ports. How about Bitcoin ports 8333 to help other BTC nodes sync? Is this
port also risky to open? Thanks again...
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‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday, May 21, 2020
Hi all, So as I run this bridgehttps://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#details/386E99371B8CD938248940B754F16AAC54B5712B And this relay https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#details/79E3B585803DE805CCBC00C1EF36B1E74372861D How do you add these as a “family”? What are the benefits of doing so?
On 20/05/2020 23:07, William Kane wrote:
> After that is all done, you can safely ignore most abuse reports
> unless they actually have a case against you, which, in most countries
> is not possible due to network providers being protected from
> liability by the law.
But everyone should be aware