Dear GNUnet Project: I dearly hope that you don't mind when come back to my below questions. I hope that you can see that they are very basic, i.e. necessary to answer for anybody to understand the nature of GNUnet. While asking "How is GNUnet not the next Silk Road?" might seem harsh, this questions needs to be addressed, all the more.
Imagine the GNUnet Project could win over people who care doing good deeds without allowing inhumane deeds. You ask people to help with your project. Isn't helping inherently trying to do good? Therefore, my question is fundamental. I am thinking about a network that does good without allowing inhumane deeds for a long time now. That's why I would like to know what people in your project are thinking about it. So please let me know. Best, Jan On 09/22/2016 02:10 PM, Jan Eichstaedt wrote: > Hello GNUnet Project: > > On the one hand I find your project admirable and would like to help. On > the other hand I wonder whether you have any measures in place to > safeguard against abuse of GNUnet. This keeps me from actually helping > GNUnet. Your philosophy (https://gnunet.org/philosophy) appears to me as > if you are not inclined to do anything about abuse. > > What prevents GNUnet from turning into the next Silk Road (selling > drugs, weapons, murderers via Tor)? > > Is this worth a discussion from your point of view? If so then you have > had this discussion long ago, I suppose. Could you please point me to > information about this? > > > Best, > Jan > > -- PD Dr. Jan Eichstaedt Reston, VA 20191, USA Phone: +1 571 306 4800
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