grarpamp <grarp...@gmail.com> writes: > Tor is not some private kingdom. It's an open application > used and operated by whoever for whatever. It is absolutely > the business of interested users to report, bring attention, > interrogate and make lists of relays to use, promote or badexit as > desired. And the business of relays to contactinfo, family, or > ignore them as they wish. And of people to sniff passwords, inject > malware, study traffic, researchers to research and others to have > interest, bandwidth to be donated, disruption and exploit to be attempted, > fileshare, illegal/legal use, promote best practices, etc. That's the nature, > strength and weakness of open apps. A free for all where people use > it as they wish, that's their purview, no police. You expect that, else you > didn't read the label. Nothing you can do about it. Deal with it or > create / fork > your own kingdom. Tor's certainly not the last / best iteration of an > anonymity > network that there will ever be.
Ack. I wouldn't want Tor to be anything but an open protocol/network. That said, the lack of network security researchers treating their research as human subjects research when human subjects can be put at risk by it is troubling. -- tor-talk mailing list - tor-talk@lists.torproject.org To unsubscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk