On 21 Apr 2017, at 14:32, Gunnar Wolf gwolf@gwolf.org wrote:
Alison dijo [Mon, Apr 10, 2017 at 07:41:00PM +0000]:
Hola todos/todas!
Hi!
Just by absolute chance, I entered today to look for some information on the Tor Project site, and came across this list. Immediately subscribed and hooked! :-D
I'm answering to a couple of the points in this list's opening mail.
- Create local Tor meetups and have Tor Project provide resources
(money, people, other materials)
- Hold the Tor Meeting in the Global South
(...)
- More Tor infrastructure in the Global South (relays, DirAuths,
BWAuths, etc)
Wow! This fits us perfectly. I'm just starting a group effort to get some students to work on Tor in the University I work at (Facultad de Ingeniería, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), setting up at least a relay, but quite probably a full exit node... Lets see how this develops. But so far, it looks like I *have* to be in this list :)
This sounds great!
But it might be hard. Some Mexican ISPs block Tor. They stop relays connecting to the tor directory authorities. So people in Mexico tell us their relays do not work.
Tor clients still work. They use fallback directories, which are harder to block.
Does your university block the Tor directory authorities? Does it use an ISP that blocks Tor?
...
- internet speeds
- possible conference center locations
- Tor's relationship to the local community (the relationship as it
exists, and opportunities to build it more)
Any other data points that we should consider? Anyone want to throw out some initial ideas for host cities? Some of the cities already discussed a bit include Quito, Mexico City, São Paulo, and Lima. There was some rough consensus that South America is the best first place for a meeting in the South, but it would be great to hear from people who disagree on that.
I jumped upon reading this. As I explained in my previous paragraph, even though I'd *love* it to be in Mexico City, I think we are too much on the edge of the region. Also, our country is not (by far) the most visa-friendly to Latin Americans.
But, FWIW, if Mexico were to be chosen (and you don't have any better contacts in here), I can provide (with 90% probability) very good facilities at my workplace, the country's largest university, either at a research institute or at a faculty surrounded by eager students.
This seems like it might work. And it is closer to the US and Europe.
But we need a hotel and venue that do not block Tor clients. In Mexico we risk some ISPs blocking Tor clients as well as relays.
Are there ISPs in Mexico that allow Tor?
T -- Tim Wilson-Brown (teor)
teor2345 at gmail dot com PGP C855 6CED 5D90 A0C5 29F6 4D43 450C BA7F 968F 094B ricochet:ekmygaiu4rzgsk6n xmpp: teor at torproject dot org ------------------------------------------------------------------------