
Hello, Emerald Onion is looking for co-location and IP transit opportunities in the Netherlands for deploying new exit relays. We have our own ASN, v4 and v6 IP space. Priorities are: - Free or cheap transit - Free or cheap cross-connects - Free or cheap colo - Amsterdam Internet Exchange - Netherlands Internet Exchange Working with collectives, or starting a new one, is interesting too. Please share your thoughts! -- yawnbox https://disobey.net/@yawnbox https://digitalcourage.social/@EmeraldOnion

On 12/10/23 2:41 PM, Christopher Sheats wrote:
Emerald Onion is looking for co-location and IP transit opportunities in the Netherlands for deploying new exit relays. We have our own ASN, v4 and v6 IP space.
Hi yawnbox, You may want to check out ColoClue[1], they're a volunteer-based not-for-profit association operated by folks in the commercial ISP space who needed a way to host their own systems. Today they support ~200 engineering hobbyists with low-cost infrastructure. They have cross-connects to AMS-IX and NL-IX[2] and diverse transit connectivity[3] in their racks. Job Snijders has given a couple talks at NLNOG and NANOG about operations-related things, like effective DDoS mitigation[4] with fastnetmon and automated peering solutions[5]. I'm not a member personally, but if I lived in the area I'd definitely include them in my list of potential options. ^^ [1]: https://coloclue.net/en/ [2]: https://github.com/coloclue/peering/blob/master/peers.yaml [3]: https://bgp.tools/as/8283#connectivity [4]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ahdxp_btHY [5]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7pkab8n7ys -- Jordan Savoca https://jordan.im/

These are complete and utter shit. avoid like the plague! nifty
On 11. Dec 2023, at 09:06, Jordan Savoca via tor-relays <tor-relays@lists.torproject.org> wrote:
On 12/10/23 2:41 PM, Christopher Sheats wrote:
Emerald Onion is looking for co-location and IP transit opportunities in the Netherlands for deploying new exit relays. We have our own ASN, v4 and v6 IP space.
Hi yawnbox,
You may want to check out ColoClue[1], they're a volunteer-based not-for-profit association operated by folks in the commercial ISP space who needed a way to host their own systems. Today they support ~200 engineering hobbyists with low-cost infrastructure.
They have cross-connects to AMS-IX and NL-IX[2] and diverse transit connectivity[3] in their racks. Job Snijders has given a couple talks at NLNOG and NANOG about operations-related things, like effective DDoS mitigation[4] with fastnetmon and automated peering solutions[5].
I'm not a member personally, but if I lived in the area I'd definitely include them in my list of potential options. ^^
[1]: https://coloclue.net/en/ [2]: https://github.com/coloclue/peering/blob/master/peers.yaml [3]: https://bgp.tools/as/8283#connectivity [4]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ahdxp_btHY [5]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7pkab8n7ys
-- Jordan Savoca https://jordan.im/ _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays

On 12/18/23 6:59 AM, abuse@relayon.org 2023 wrote:
These are complete and utter shit.
avoid like the plague!
nifty
Oh? I'm curious to hear more about your reasons/experience, if you're open to sharing. They're pretty well-regarded in networking spaces. -- Jordan Savoca https://jordan.im/

On Dienstag, 19. Dezember 2023 16:23:27 CET Jordan Savoca via tor-relays wrote:
On 12/18/23 6:59 AM, abuse@relayon.org 2023 wrote:
These are complete and utter shit.
avoid like the plague!
nifty ;-) You've landed in the sun again, I envy you.
Oh? I'm curious to hear more about your reasons/experience, if you're open to sharing. They're pretty well-regarded in networking spaces.
ColoClue is nice if you have _low_ traffic and want to learn about routing BGP, OSPF... Artikel10 has server running there. Christopher Sheats could ask for traffic prices at https://serverius.net/colocation/server-colocation/ -- ╰_╯ Ciao Marco! Debian GNU/Linux It's free software and it gives you freedom!

Dear nifty, thank you for the valuable feedback. <3 Let's continue the discussion off-list. ### Dear all, I think ColoClue is a great place to run relays. It's self-organized infrastructure and not some Hetzner foo where everyone else is running relays. They run a reliable colo and they are great people. Only drawback is that we (Artikel10) were capped at 500Mbit/s. But there might be ways around this limit that we never tried. Thank you @ all ColoClue people for housing our first colocated Artikel10 exit relay. Much appreciated :) -- please reach out to me if you are attending 37C3. Best kantorkel Am 12/18/23 um 14:59 schrieb abuse@relayon.org 2023:
These are complete and utter shit.
avoid like the plague!
nifty
On 11. Dec 2023, at 09:06, Jordan Savoca via tor-relays <tor-relays@lists.torproject.org> wrote:
On 12/10/23 2:41 PM, Christopher Sheats wrote:
Emerald Onion is looking for co-location and IP transit opportunities in the Netherlands for deploying new exit relays. We have our own ASN, v4 and v6 IP space.
Hi yawnbox,
You may want to check out ColoClue[1], they're a volunteer-based not-for-profit association operated by folks in the commercial ISP space who needed a way to host their own systems. Today they support ~200 engineering hobbyists with low-cost infrastructure.
They have cross-connects to AMS-IX and NL-IX[2] and diverse transit connectivity[3] in their racks. Job Snijders has given a couple talks at NLNOG and NANOG about operations-related things, like effective DDoS mitigation[4] with fastnetmon and automated peering solutions[5].
I'm not a member personally, but if I lived in the area I'd definitely include them in my list of potential options. ^^
[1]: https://coloclue.net/en/ [2]: https://github.com/coloclue/peering/blob/master/peers.yaml [3]: https://bgp.tools/as/8283#connectivity [4]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ahdxp_btHY [5]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7pkab8n7ys
-- Jordan Savoca https://jordan.im/ _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
_______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
participants (5)
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abuse@relayon.org 2023
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Christopher Sheats
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Jordan Savoca
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kantorkel@hamburg.freifunk.net
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lists@for-privacy.net