If I may be allowed to add my 2cents as a newbie...
Just found the website https://torstatus.blutmagie.de Linked off the
https://www.torservers.net site. If this is reliable, then stats would
be easy to determine. List the say...top 5(random number) of each
country and support them? If a particular country does not have the min
5 then run a contest... As other exit nodes reach a milestone in
say...uptime + Bandwidth + Location , they are added to the support
list. This gives a goal for node operators to reach, and tells you they
are good system admins and should be taken care of.
A secondary with the "top 5 idea" After the "top 5" are taken care of,
if there is money left over, a voting system could be put into place
where the community could vote on which node to donate to OR the ability
to earmark their donations to particular nodes.
On 07/29/2012 09:25 PM, Zac Lym wrote:
This seems (to me) like an obvious suggestion, so my apologies if it's
already been thought up.
Why not establish a team/scoreboard system, like those used for
distributed computing and BitCoin mining? This elegantly solves a few
problems while with minimal resource commitment from the Tor
organization.Most importantly, it's a way to pump money into the
system without ruining the current atmosphere. Sponsors could easily
buy some bandwidth or people can also just donate their own
connections and join a particular team. The scoreboard is based on
goodwill, not dollars spent.It also eliminates the hassle of setting
prices, as teams can compete for dollars and bandwidth provided,
essentially setting their own prices. The org could also setup a
payment system, like we-pay, that the team admins can configure to
deposit funds. It could be set as a proof of work system, paying
after the bandwidth has been provided.
This also allows a degree of control to prevent abuse from admins
trying to juice stats by abusing some network infrastructure, like
dummy trial accounts on hosting sites. A group admin could block
specific hosts or the Tor project could remove an entire group.
Finally, this could allow for the Tor project to create metrics based
on things other than speed, akin to how Folding@home scores GPU and
CPU contributions differently. Then the project can set anonymity
goals for the network (such as location, ISP, backbone provider, etc)
and the volunteers will adjust their patterns accordingly.
Finally, I would like to strongly suggest taking a cut of all
donations to pay for the new infrastructure and Tor research and
development. I wouldn't want development to slow on Tor because
donations are going to bandwidth instead. Indeed, I would prefer we
spend a ton of money on the stenography efforts and usability.
Anyway, thanks for the hard work!
-Zach Lym
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