On Sun, May 03, 2015 at 09:18:30PM +0200, Sebastian Urbach wrote:
On May 3, 2015 7:45:39 PM Matthew Finkel Matthew.Finkel@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Matthew,
Hi Ops,
We recently began responding to t-shirt requests again. Sorry for the long silence. There's been a lot happening around here but not enough
0> time or people to do everything, so the t-shirt requests simply remained
untouched. But, despite the overload, t-shirts are important because they are a small token of our thanks and appreciation for making the network what it is today.
We responded to around 70 t-shirt requests from relay operators in April, which comprised all requests for which we could verify (within reason) the request came from the person who controlled the qualifying relay. We still have another 20 requests where the requestor is not obviously the owner of the relay. Currently the content of a relay's Contact field is used, but this does not always provide enough (or any) information. For this case, we need an authentication mechanism which proves control of the relay but is something relay operators won't mind running.
I'm really not amused. As i recall a bunch of people including myself offered to help.
Amused? This really has nothing to do with amusement. If you want to work on something, then please come work on it, we really are overloaded. That being said, correctly handling t-shirt requests and other similar communications is important and delicate. The Tor Project is in a difficult situation where it wants to support the Tor network but not run it. This means, to some extent, we become a trusted third-party with some information. T-shirt requests are a perfect example of this, where we receive requests from people who choose not to publically publish their contact details yet they would like a reward for their work - which they absolutely deserve. This requires that operators trust us, so letting anyone help take care of these requests is not wise.
I get the distinct impression that you keep everything within a small circle of people, no matter what. Even if that means that services are suffering.
We're a group of security and privacy conscious individuals who want a world where everyone has secure and private communications, this isn't exactly a good combination which leads to publically discussioning everything. I certainly admit sometimes I default to discussing topics privately rather than sending it to tor-talk or tor-relays - I nearly did that with this thread. It's a bad habit, but it's not as common as I think you think it is.
- Matt