mick,
My IP address resolves to "tor-proxy"
having non-existing reverse dns entries causes a lot of services to slow
down or refuse service, that do PTR->A record matching.
you might want to add some domain name (and not use the domain of your
isp for that ;) :P
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
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On Sat, 4 Jun 2011, George Gemelos wrote:
>> On Sat, Jun 4, 2011 at 11:24 AM, mick
mbm@rlogin.net wrote:
>>> I think you may have mis-interpreted the meaning of "top-posting". And
>>> the rest of your rant suggests that may not be all you don't understand.
>>>
>>
>>
>> He did, maybe he's not familiar with mailing lists, so here is info about top-
>> posting:
>>
http://idallen.com/topposting.html
>>
>> Also, to everyone who complains about top posting, stop using mutt and get
>> an email client with conversation threading, is much more comfortable.
>>
>> To the OP, the amount of complaints you will have also depends on your ISP.
>> Go to torstatus and copy the emails of everyone with your ISP.
>> (copy the emails of people in your country, and then check who has the same
>> ISP with whois). Select only the ones that are exit nodes. Send them an email
>> asking for advice, and if they had any trouble with the ISP before.
>>
>> Read your ISP's acceptable use policy and check if it says something about Tor
>> or proxy servers. If not, maybe isn't a bad a idea to contact them and have a
>> confirmation that is ok to run an exit node.
>> Remember to put the tor exit notice on the IP address on port 80 this one:
>>
https://gitweb.torproject.org/tor.git?a=blob_plain;hb=HEAD;f=contrib/tor-
>> exit-notice.html
>
>
> Thanks for the advice. For now, I decided to set up an exit for port 80 and 443 only. I will probably leave it like this for a while and see how it goes. If all goes well I will switch over to the reduced exit policy. Thanks for all the advice.
>
> mick,
> My IP address resolves to "tor-proxy" and I have the Tor webpage set up on port 80. I have also spoken with my hosting company and they said that they did not have a policy against Tor. They told me that if they receive a lot of complaints, they might set up an ACL on specific ports. Their official response was therefore to give it a try and see how it goes. I guess worse case I can switch back to a middle node. They are a small company with great customer service, so I think they will try to be accommodating. I did check for them on the network status page looking for relays which resolved to their domain, not the best method, and only found two other nodes, both middle.
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>
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>