Would it be possible to run a freenet node in a datacenter, that node will be set up to run with strangers. If I and my friends ( in a dark net) add that node as a friend we are alle connected to freenet and our identity is secure. If I would make such a setup what would be the ammount of data bandwidth (the total amount of send and received data a day/month ) needed for such a node? Is it possible to fix the maximum amount of bandwith used? I would not like to receive a bill for going over my quota.
Jelbert On 9 Sep 2008, at 15:05, Evan Daniel wrote: > On Tue, Sep 9, 2008 at 5:22 AM, bqz69 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> I have almost made a supplementary Freenet, Freemail, JSite -and FMS >> minihowto, but I need an important question answered. >> >> How does a Freenet newbie, who urgently needs Freenet for some >> purpose, add >> reference nodes of Friends, when he/she does not have any Freenet >> Friends, >> but is all on his own? >> >> This is a question about finding Freenet friends, and not about >> adding the >> very reference node (that I know already) >> >> Freenet becomes more and more rurgent, I find >> >> I need it explained in down to earth words? >> >> It is a very relevant question I hope. :-) > > Short answer: you don't. > > Longer answer: the point of the Friends nodes is that the nodes are > run by people you trust (for some value of trust). In order for that > to be meaningful, you have to know the person in some context other > than as a potential person to swap noderefs with. If you only know > them as someone to swap noderefs with, then it's not particularly more > or less secure than the automatic Strangers connections -- in either > case, the people you're connecting to might be Bad Guys in disguise. > So, in order to add Friends nodes in a manner that actually improves > your security, you have to find people you know who run freenet -- if > you don't know any such, then the best thing to do is convince your > friends to run freenet, and swap noderefs with them. There simply > isn't a shortcut here; if you want better security than the Strangers > mode offers, you need to have some non-freenet-based trust in the > person you're connecting to. (However, there's no requirement that > you know the person in real life -- online friends who you know from > another context work fine too.) Exactly how much you need to trust > the Friends you connect to will depend on your personal situation. > > Hope that clears things up... > > Evan Daniel > _______________________________________________ > Support mailing list > Support@freenetproject.org > http://news.gmane.org/gmane.network.freenet.support > Unsubscribe at http://emu.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/support > Or mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > _______________________________________________ Support mailing list Support@freenetproject.org http://news.gmane.org/gmane.network.freenet.support Unsubscribe at http://emu.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/support Or mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]