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Mike Hearn,
Simple. If you start filtering anything at all, regardless of what it is (yes, even if you filter child porn or fraud sites) then I will block any connection of your relays to mine (which are exits and guards totally 4Gbps). There are uses for preventing some connections like if you are legally required to then I guess the tradeoff of some inconvenience for a handful of relays, but still providing high-speed access to Tor for most people and sites is worth it. When you begin to do it as a proactive censorship event is when I will be firmly against you.
The moment people censor things because it is illegal, immoral or "terrorist" is the moment that person accepts responsibility for the traffic that passes through their nodes and is an active attempt by them to filter what people can access. Freedom isn't free unless it is totally free and a selective reading policy through Tor is not just a bad idea as stated below, I find it outright insulting to me and everyone else who cares about the free and open internet. The fact somebody has the audacity to come to a project like Tor and propose blacklisting mechanisms is jaw-dropping.
In addition, botnets using Tor actually improve the security of the network. Generally the more traffic there is, the harder it is to conduct statistical attacks against the users. Now of course it is not the most politic thing to say or the most popular, but it's the truth. We don't need to stop x y or z using Tor, we need to get more people using Tor regardless of their purpose. Botnets are the result of design/security flaws and not something within the scope of Tor Project to address.
You did mention the development of a workaround to avoid people who do block whatever resource they are trying to access, but what is the point? Once it is easy to start blocking hidden services like that, it's only a very small step to blacklists floating around, then like Spamhaus that list maintainer acts like a mafia to coerce other operators into using it. Even in the wording of what you admitted yourself, additional complexity, Tor should be spending time improving it's systems and fixing bugs rather than making censorship easier for the masses. This is one of the concerns I voiced in the Paris Tor developer meeting only a few weeks ago too.
As I recall, you are also the person who raised the idea of coin tinting or a similar concept in the bitcoin community to identify "suspect" coins and that backfired spectacularly on you. Don't try to bring such ideas to Tor because they are not the same and I doubt you would try to propose blacklisting bitcoin addresses on the bitcoin network? Then again, after reading that message, I honestly don't know so while you are reading this, let me know if you run any relays so I can avoid them. I could go on for a lot longer, but I'll leave it at this for now or I will not be getting to sleep tonight. Just know I'd rather go to prison than act as an assistant of censorship.
- -T
On 21/07/2014 00:38, grarpamp wrote:
On Sun, Jul 20, 2014 at 6:34 PM, Mike Hearn mike@plan99.net wrote:
Hello,
As we know, hidden services can be useful for all kinds of legitimate things (Pond's usage is particularly interesting), however they do also sometimes get used by botnets and other problematic things.
Tor provides exit policies to let exit relay operators restrict traffic they consider to be unwanted or abusive. In this way a kind of international group consensus emerges about what is and is not acceptable usage of Tor. For instance, SMTP out is widely restricted.
Has there been any discussion of implementing similar controls for hidden services, where relays would refuse to act as introduction points for hidden services that match certain criteria e.g. have a particular key, or whose key appears in a list downloaded occasionally via Tor itself. In this way relay operators could avoid their resources being used for establishing communication with botnet CnC servers.
Obviously such a scheme would require a protocol and client upgrade to avoid nodes building circuits to relays that then refuse to introduce.
The downside is additional complexity. The upside is potentially recruiting new relay operators.
HS's will just change their HS keys out from under your list. Then it becomes whack a mole. And you'll also be taking out shared services with the bathwater. Are you funding maintenance of that list? Ready to be called a censor when you exceed your noble intent as all have done before? And to be ignored by those operators who don't care to subscribe to your censor list thus nullifying your efforts (not least of why because it may be illegal for them to look at services on the list to verify it, or to look at and make decisions regarding content of traffic that transits them). And ignored by botnet ops who will surely run their own relays and internal pathing. _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays