Node's on a dedicated machine, I have a couple of RasPis kicking about, might spin up nodes on them too.
~Chip

On 06/07/2014 14:48, Julien ROBIN wrote:
In effect, as Moritz said (and Roman also tried to say) it's necessary for 
navigation over Tor, that every Exit Possibility/Restriction are listed into 
your Exit Policy. If your Exit Node is not going to connect to a given website, 
it's fine, but the Tor Client have to know it, in order to automatically choose 
another Exit to reach the destination.


For Tor Exit Node on a residential DSL line, because I love challenges, I've done this in 
the past, from August 2013 to end of December 2013, with unlimited exit policy ;) on a 
Raspberry Pi. May be I was lucky but apart from 1 copyright infrigement (French 
"Hadopi" the second week), I never had any problem, and in such case the 
situation is not very comlicated to handle (you simply explain).

If you're like me you will have no problem by thinking your Internet connexion 
have great chance to be looked by your ISP and/or bigger instition : it's part 
of the challenge, and a challenge is interesting when almost no one is plucky 
enough to do what you're going to do ;)


In order to get your participation to last a long time, it's usefull to run 
your node on a dedicated machine, while you can focus on your hobbies and use 
your computer/desktop as before.

Best regards,
Julien ROBIN

----- Mail original -----
De: "Moritz Bartl" <mor...@torservers.net>
À: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
Envoyé: Dimanche 6 Juillet 2014 14:41:23
Objet: Re: [tor-relays] UK Exit Node

On 07/06/2014 09:39 AM, Michael Banks wrote:
‎The block lists are very limited, i.e P2P, lists of known
blackhats/paedophiles, unallocated IP ranges and most importantly:
government-owned address and anti-tor addresses
Please do not run PeerGuardian or any other blacklist. These lists are
part of the problem, and in no way a solution. As stated earlier in this
thread, it will break stuff. These lists are never up to date and always
contain false information.

It is your exit, you can indeed block IPs, but please do it on the level
of ExitPolicy.

In your world maybe "government-owned addresses" are a bad thing. For me
and many other Tor users certainly not.

You're free to run an exit on a residential line, but I doubt that your
ISP will like the abuse complaints. You will likely get kicked off your
contract sooner or later. Also, a residential ISP will not forward abuse
complaints or even tell you about them, so there is no way for you to
explain yourself.



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