On 09/05/2014 12:08 AM, Virgil Griffith wrote: > If that ascent is due to you, this screams to the success of the > torservers.net model. It might be useful to see that plot without > Torservers.net in there. If I figure out how to make sense of the raw > consensus file I may plot it.
Essential to the torservers.net idea is to teach others to run relays and share expertise. I put up a "How to get from a Debian base install to a 'complete' Tor exit relay" since the beginning. Most of our partner orgs are actively involved in local outreach and serve as points of contacts for other relay operators. We receive roughly one mail every second week to support@ from someone who asks us for help in setting up their own relays. Also, obviously, having more orgs run around telling people "You have to run relays!" is helpful. :) Over time, we handed out a couple of thousand "Run a Tor relay" posters. Long story short, even if you filtered out the actual relays run by all our partners, it not necessarily reflects "this is what would have happened without them". While we're at "how to grow the network": One idea that has been around for long time is to provide abuse handling services and legal protection ("Put our data into your WHOIS and we will take care of 99% of the trouble; also, for the remaining 1%, we will pay a lawyer and help you find one."). This is possible, and I believe it would be very helpful in growing exit relays, but I personally can't take it on at the moment. I would still be quite interested in a (pie?) chart that shows guard/middle/exit capacity per family, ideally over time. I haven't seen any "per family" analysis. -- Moritz Bartl https://www.torservers.net/ -- tor-talk mailing list - tor-talk@lists.torproject.org To unsubscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk