There was some excellent comedy when the Prime Minister and Attorney-General
and even the tech head were asked to define metadata.
Robert
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> On 5 Sep 2017, at 11:18, Paul Templeton wrote:
>
>> So, in Australia, if you're running a Tor relay, it's actually easier to
>> *not* be an ISP.
>
> I'm testing this with AGs department - I have put in a request to see if Tor
> falls outside of the scope - That is it's not a commercial servi
> So, in Australia, if you're running a Tor relay, it's actually easier to
> *not* be an ISP.
I'm testing this with AGs department - I have put in a request to see if Tor
falls outside of the scope - That is it's not a commercial service. The law
only states commercial services that you charge
> On 4 Sep 2017, at 11:28, Paul Templeton wrote:
>
> > Could you please define “Metadata”? Server connections? That would be quite
> > a bit with a high traffic tor relay …
>
> https://www.ag.gov.au/dataretention
>
> Should answer your questions.
... but it doesn't really contain the level o
> Could you please define “Metadata”? Server connections? That would be quite a
> bit with a high traffic tor relay …
https://www.ag.gov.au/dataretention
Should answer your questions.
Paul
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These days, layer 3 IP is nothing other than handy identifier
for layer 2 and below traffic characterization and probing.
So long as everyone continues whining about bandwidth, which
can perhaps be mostly free at link layer, or are being anti-mix,
as starter defenses... they'll get no solution. IMO
> Could you please define âMetadataâ? Server connections? That would be
> quite a bit with a high traffic tor relay â¦
>
> niftybunny
>
Generally speaking I believe metadata is source IP, Source port,
Destination IP, Destination port, timestamp of connections.
For the USA government and othe
> If you're a subscriber of such an ISP, it's turtles, such ISP has same
> data as
> you would anyways, thus this irrelavant. Only way to evade is with an
> anti-GPA
> network analysis design which tor doesn't and won't provide.
>
Wondering what an anti-GPA network analysis is...
Could you please define “Metadata”? Server connections? That would be quite a
bit with a high traffic tor relay …
niftybunny
“For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our
citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'”
--David Cameron, 2015
> On 26
On Sat, Aug 26, 2017 at 6:38 AM, Paul Templeton wrote:
>> If you're interested in becoming your own ISP (obtaining your own ASN,
>> IPv6 and IPv4 scopes), you'll need to apply via APNIC, as I did in the
>> US with ARIN.
>
> Would if I could - but here in AU you have to log all metadata for two yea
> On 26 Aug 2017, at 20:38, Paul Templeton wrote:
>
>
>
>> If you're interested in becoming your own ISP (obtaining your own ASN,
>> IPv6 and IPv4 scopes), you'll need to apply via APNIC, as I did in the
>> US with ARIN. Here is an example:
>
> Would if I could - but here in AU you have to lo
> If you're interested in becoming your own ISP (obtaining your own ASN,
> IPv6 and IPv4 scopes), you'll need to apply via APNIC, as I did in the
> US with ARIN. Here is an example:
Would if I could - but here in AU you have to log all metadata for two years if
you are an ISP.
I either listen
Hi,
On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 5:29 PM, Paul Templeton wrote:
> Thanx to all here on the list for input to earlier posts. Helped a lot.
>
> Question I have is there anywhere where you can get a block of IP address or
> lease as I'm in the process of getting a 10/10Mb SHDSL service(No flaming
> dat
One year ago we were trying the same in the Asia region with DigitalOcean. We
did not get a lot of traffic because of the few tor relays / bandwidth
authorities in Asia. At the moment your best chance in helping Tor with
bandwidth is buying a server in Europe or parts of the USA. If you have rea
OVH has this in AU
5.9
For security reasons, OVH reserves the right to proceed with the immediate
suspension without
notice, of any Server on which there is a public service Proxy, IRC, VPN or TOR
which is available free
of charge or for a fee, and for which OVH has knowledge of its fraudulent
On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 01:30:13 + (UTC)
Paul Templeton wrote:
> At the moment there are 50 nodes in Australia with the fastest running at
> 357Kbs and only two exit nodes - fastest is 100Kbs. Its a reflection on the
> state of politics and the level of service that is provided by ISP's.
I feel
Thanx Tim,
> * reverse DNS pointing to your domain, and
I would do it anyway
> * registration services like abuse.net.
Will look into it
> ovh.com.au
Pricing ok - may be the better option - 100Mbs unlimited - [i'll give them a
call and see what they have/can do.] - I just rang them they have d
Hey,
Thanks for running a relay!
> On 24 Aug 2017, at 10:29, Paul Templeton wrote:
>
> is there anywhere where you can get a block of IP address or lease as I'm in
> the process of getting a 10/10Mb SHDSL service(No flaming data cap :-)) here
> in AU
Are you sure an Australian relay will use
unny"
To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2017 10:41:12 AM
Subject: Re: [tor-relays] Any IP allocations available out there?
The smallest block you can advertise with your own AD is a /24 as far as I
know. Getting a IPv4 /24 is …. expensive and hard to get. If you
The smallest block you can advertise with your own AD is a /24 as far as I
know. Getting a IPv4 /24 is …. expensive and hard to get. If you are not
incredible rich and very tech savvy and a hardcore Tor supporter: Forget it.
Get yourself a few virtual servers.
niftybunny
“For too long, we hav
Thanx to all here on the list for input to earlier posts. Helped a lot.
Question I have is there anywhere where you can get a block of IP address or
lease as I'm in the process of getting a 10/10Mb SHDSL service(No flaming data
cap :-)) here in AU but I want an IP range that abuse questions can
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