On Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 1:01 PM, Paul Syverson paul.syverson@nrl.navy.mil wrote:
https://petsymposium.org/2011/papers/hotpets11-final10Syverson.pdf
Nice paper. Wonder why it isn't in anonbib too. I am used to keep a bookmark on anonbib as a central repository of anonymity research
I will add a bibtext entry. If anyone else discovers missing papers please email me and I will add bibtext entries for them.
written about onion routing aren't in anonbib. Not sure why that is, nor why, given some of the other papers by myself and others that are highlighted as especially important, why arguably the most important
destinations) aren't highlighted (or even included in the latter
personal webpage more than once every two years while I'm at it and
might look at http://www.onion-router.net/Publications.html for at least the earlier ones. Cf. also the bibliography of "A Peel of Onion"
Is there a project to collect, index and archive all the relevant papers from all the various internet sites, homepages, anonbib, etc... into one central, easily mirrored and referenced repository? git would seem more useful for this than the various disparate http resouces of uncommon design. If the fame of the original site is needed that would be included in the commit or a per paper paired metadata file. This model could be extended to multimedia formats of papers via rsync, with the index being git'd. The index itself could of course be stored in git in html format to point browser at locally, or even remotely over gitweb as the possible internet frontend.
There may be volnteers on tor-talk if fwd there.
grarpamp wrote:
Is there a project to collect, index and archive all the relevant papers from all the various internet sites, homepages, anonbib, etc... into one central, easily mirrored and referenced repository? git would seem more useful for this than the various disparate http resouces of uncommon design. If the fame of the original site is needed that would be included in the commit or a per paper paired metadata file. This model could be extended to multimedia formats of papers via rsync, with the index being git'd. The index itself could of course be stored in git in html format to point browser at locally, or even remotely over gitweb as the possible internet frontend.
There may be volnteers on tor-talk if fwd there.
I whipped up this github repository, based on anonbib. Anonbib is the most in-depth project for cataloging these kinds of papers, so contributing new entries there is probably your best bet. However, if people submit issues or pull requests to my repo, I'll send a bibtex entry to anonbib.
The readme probably still has some errant formatting errors: https://github.com/glamrock/anonbib
that was a fun distraction, Griffin