FW: I still do not understand...

Paul Syverson syverson at itd.nrl.navy.mil
Wed May 25 22:02:46 UTC 2005


Hi Manuel,

Two points. First, if nothing about the nodes is published or
otherwise known to you the Tor client, there is no basis to think that
the network (or the part presented to you) consists of anything but a
hundred nodes run on a few highspeed machines by a single
individual. Actually there is not even the need to setup a hundred
distinct nodes. Basically there is no anonymity protection at all.

Second, anonymity and censorship resistance are related but not the
same. One could want to provide an anonymous communication network
without a concomitant desire to provide censorship resistance. Also,
censorship resistance is hard, and anonymity is just one of the
building blocks for it. So, if you do want to build censorship
resistance, you need to build good anonymity. And, you need to have
researched, tested, and understood the anonymity provided to know
to use it in the censorship resistance context.

aloha,
Paul


On Wed, May 25, 2005 at 02:44:46PM -0700, admin wrote:
> I am re-sending this to the mailing list as it apears that the
> original mailing did not make it, -Manuel
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> 
> Why respect,
> 
> Why do exit nodes have to be published? Why does the address of *any*
> node have to be published. Is this an inherent property of the design,
> or just an implementation shortcoming? Why can not the node resolution
> be done dynamically as one joins the net. I can easily the possibility
> of starting a connection, having the local tor consult a central server
> (call a root node, just as DNS) and then go from there.
> 
> I get the impression of this being a 'political' decision to avoid being
> accused of aiding or abetting abusive behavior. If I am wrong then I
> would love to be corrected, but if it is so then I think the designers
> should get over it. The current implementation is too easy to censor.
> What is the use of an anonymity enabling service if it gets blocked?
> Either you believe in anonimity and free speech with _all_ it's
> consecuences or you do not. If you do not, then fine; a lot of good
> people feel the same way and think there are "limits". I, personally,
> do not and would encourage the tor developers and the EFF to take this
> view or at least be neutral and let each node decide.
> 
> At least leave it up to the local node. Make an unpublished / unlisted
> option just as in pots, and not for testing purposes.
> 
> What am I missing? Regards, - Manuel




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