Is there a legal basis for suing government or other agencies with a public service mandate that persistently block traffic from ip addresses of *non-exit* relays?  Is the list of the non-exits easy to obtain by non-tor users and why?
I understand and support publishing *exit* ip addresses, that is not what i am questioning here.


On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 3:37 PM, mick <mbm@rlogin.net> wrote:
On Tue, 15 Apr 2014 21:24:00 +0200
no.thing_to-hide@cryptopathie.eu allegedly wrote:
>
> I run an internal relay in Austria
>
> https://torstatus.blutmagie.de/router_detail.php?FP=19eb1397aa60f3fb8bd0995b96dd8cc83abf0db3
>
> and checked
>
> http://www.nhs.uk
>
> from my original IP. It worked, I accessed the site.
>

That's interesting.

>From the DNS responses I get from various places it looks as if the
NHS site is run on the Akamai CDN. So it may be that (some of) the
Akamai servers are blocking Tor.

Mick

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 Mick Morgan
 gpg fingerprint: FC23 3338 F664 5E66 876B  72C0 0A1F E60B 5BAD D312
 http://baldric.net

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