You normally can't run a server through a regular "proxy" as you would
need to be able to advertise an open port for the bridge and regular
proxy servers won't let you do that. You can do it if you use a VPN with
a public IP address for the bridge however, or a second IP address, but
you would need to pay $$$ for this.
-Neel Chauhan
===
https://www.neelc.org/
On 2018-05-26 16:19, Keifer Bly wrote:
> Yes but I would run it through the proxy so it would have the proxy IP
> address. I just noticed tor could use more bridges as there are four
> times as many public relays as their are bridges.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On May 26, 2018, at 12:44 PM, Logforme <m7527@abc.se> wrote:
>
>>> So I am considering running a bridge alongside my relay gotland
>> Would the bridge use the same public IP address as the relay?
>> Since you already run a relay, that IP address is public. The point of
>> bridges is that they are not public so they are harder to block.
>> A government that censors the internet would surely block access to
>> all Tor relay IP addresses.
>>
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