On Sun, 2005-09-04 at 11:49 -0400, Tyler Durden wrote:
Shawn Quinn wrote...
For the people that only route stuff like HTTP traffic through your Tor node, it will be a benefit. If I'm IRCing and get routed through your node, that's a different story (but it's no different than the bad old days of IIP where people dropped off by the dozens when someone shut down their computer). A Mixmaster remailer where the mail was transacted at public Internet access points would be much more useful. It would actually be funny if someone did this and named the node "starbuck".
So: How hard would it be to surreptitiously install a Tor node into a computer at a public library?
A Houston (TX, USA) public library? Could be next to impossible, as well as excellent cause for revocation of your library card and possible criminal prosecution if caught. Needless to say, I haven't tried. The best you could do from Houston libraries would be a proxy accessed via HTTPS. At one time you could telnet, but that has long since passed. Other public libraries? Who knows. -- Shawn K. Quinn <skquinn@speakeasy.net>