Mike Perry:
> 5. Invest in the Tor network.
>
>Based purely on extrapolating from the Noisebridge relays, we could
>add ~300 relays, and double the network capacity for $3M/yr, or about $1
>per user per year (based on the user counts from:
>https://metrics.torproject.org/users.html
M. Ziebell:
> Besides the fact that this could be a great opportunity for tor in many
> ways I see two problems we should consider:
>
> - this vastly growth would be "artificial". What happens to all the
> users and servers if they stop supporting the product or close-down?
In this case, presum
Fabio Pietrosanti (naif):
> Il 9/27/14, 2:33 AM, Mike Perry ha scritto:
> >
> > We could also handle controlled rollouts to fractions of their userbase
> > to test the waters, and slowly add high capacity nodes to the network to
> > support these new users, to ensure we have the people ready to acc
>
> But, because this is fraction rises with both D and U, these research
> papers rightly point out that you can't keep adding relays *and* users
> and expect Tor to scale.
Broadcast a fraction of all available directories? Use md5 as a random
number generator, hash the ECC/RSA keys using md5. A
On 26 September 2014 22:28, Mike Perry wrote:
> That's basically what I'm arguing: We can increase the capacity of the
> network by reducing directory waste but adding more high capacity relays
> to replace this waste, causing the overall directory to be the same
> size, but with more capacity.
I
Besides the fact that this could be a great opportunity for tor in many
ways I see two problems we should consider:
- this vastly growth would be "artificial". What happens to all the
users and servers if they stop supporting the product or close-down?
- IMHO it is a problem if the network exp
Il 9/27/14, 2:33 AM, Mike Perry ha scritto:
>
> We could also handle controlled rollouts to fractions of their userbase
> to test the waters, and slowly add high capacity nodes to the network to
> support these new users, to ensure we have the people ready to accept
> payment for running the server
To avoid squashing the Tor network with all of these new clients, the
company would almost certainly have to run some big relays to help
compensate for the additional load. Another proposal would be some sort of
incentive for running relays.
-V
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