Interesting...

Don't exit nodes with equal bandwidth have equal chance of being utilised on a circuit? Why is your US exit being utilised more?

Looking at the map, I thought Canada could do with a few more exits?

Should geo diversity be related to numbers of internet users in that country? Ie, Canada, ~1/2 population of UK, so should run approximately 1/2 as many exits at least? Or am I overthinking this?

Are there other legal advantages to running an exit node in another country? Such as choosing a country with which your own country has no extradition laws? In case something really bad happened.

Regards,

C

On Thu, Dec 8, 2016 at 10:06 AM, Sec INT <sec.int9@gmail.com> wrote:
Ive got exits in the US, France ,Finland (dead) and Bulgaria but its v difficult to find any exit providers in the Far East - I have relays in Bangalore and Singapore (which gets hit pretty hard) but if you do find a provider out East let us know

P.s Bangalore is under utilised - 60mb/s but has barely used up 1Gb in 2 weeks a as oppsed to US exit which is doing 1TB a day now at 60mb/s with a 1000 connections most of the time

We are supposed to go for geo diversity but usuage remains low for me in more isolated areas  e.g Bangalore,Africa

regards

Mark B


> On 8 Dec 2016, at 09:53, Chris Adams <chris@chrisada.co.uk> wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I want to start up another exit node. I have a  few choices for which country it's in. I currently live in a country with quite a high exit node/population density.
>
> Are there any advantages to distributing nodes around the globe in terms of performance/privacy?
>
> Are there some countries where you definitely shouldn't run exit nodes? (Censored internet is an obvious example)
>
> C
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