Am Sonntag, 10. Februar 2013 schrieb Karsten Loesing :
On 2/10/13
8:20 AM, David Gilbert wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm operating 6 relays in the EC2 where 4/6 claim to be
located outside
> the US but only 1/6 show up as outside of the US based on
the IP address
> and report on atlas (https://atlas.torproject.org/#search/relay1org,
> don't heckle, I'm getting an idea of pricing and boosting
speed over the
> next 5 months).
Hi David,
Atlas is wrong here, because its back-end service Onionoo uses
an
outdated GeoIP database. I'll look into updating it today.
Recent Tor clients use an updated GeoIP database which resolves
these
addresses to US, JP, IE, US, AU, and SG.
Atlas, or rather its back-end service, now uses
a more recent GeoIP database from January 2013 that locates 3 of
your 6 relays outside of the U.S.
Best,
Karsten
(I can't say much about the rest of your question, and rather
than
guessing, I'll leave it to somebody else.)
Best,
Karsten
> Now, I'm curious if the IP address vs region it's
supposedly operating
> in matters at all. Will people in the middle east be less
likely to
> connect to my Tokyo/Singapore based relays because the IP
address shows
> its in the USA? Or any other issues?
>
> Also, if this does in fact affect the effectiveness of my
relays in
> those regions, has anyone had experience being able to
acquire an IP
> from Amazon for other regions? I do not have a support
contract, since
> I'm paying for this out of my own pocket so I'm unable to
contact tech
> support. I would be inclined to pay whatever fees it costs
to get it
> done, if I knew exactly what it is I need to do.
>
> - David
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