On 01/25/2017 12:43 PM, John Newman wrote:
On Jan 24, 2017, at 3:52 AM, Mirimir <mirimir@riseup.net> wrote:
On 01/24/2017 01:04 AM, Cecilia Tanaka wrote: Please, John, I know I need to give you (and a lot of people here, oops!) a lot of answers, but I'm ending (at least trying, I swear, Oda!) a lot of things in this moment.
That's good, I think :)
If possible, please make Mirimir happy and give him some feedback about this project. I liked the idea of Fast Data Transfer via Tor, but I'm not the best person to give an opinion because I have almost no technical knowledge. You know, I need to learn how to code decently because it's a more useful skill than being a lawyer. Everybody hates lawyers! :(((
What I need is help understanding the privacy implications. I'm going to explore possibilities for moving long transfers randomly across sets of subflows. Using "roundrobin" as mptcp_scheduler instead of "fullmesh" would be a start. That would also spread load across more relays. Another possibility is aggregating OnionCat and GarliCat links, so transfers would be split between Tor and I2P.
I was thinking about forwarding this message to Tor-Talk list to get more feedbacks, but I was kick-banned there and I need to pretend that I'm not reading the list anymore! :P :P :P
I'm not expecting constructive feedback from Tor devs :(
Thank you very much! :* <3
​Ceci ------- "Don't let anyone rob you of your imagination, your creativity, or your curiosity. It's your place in the world; it's your life. Go on and do all you can with it, and make it the life you want to live." - Mae Jemison
On Sat, Jan 21, 2017 at 5:46 AM, Mirimir <mirimir@riseup.net> wrote:
Using OnionCat and MPTCP, one can transfer data between servers via Tor at ~50 Mbps. With multiple targets, source servers can push ~200 Mbps. It's obviously not very anonymous. But it's probably more anonymous than using VPN services. That's for servers with gigabit uplinks, by the way.
https://ipfs.io/ipfs/QmUDV2KHrAgs84oUc7z9zQmZ3whx1NB6YDPv8ZRuf4dutN/
I read mirmirs post with some interest... At the moment MPTCP is not implemented in FreeBSD and i don't have a linux machine particularly convenient to play with this on, although that should change soon.
I talked to some people on #freebsd and there is an MPTCP source tree, but it's essentially a fork at the moment, total PITA to get merged into a running system, probably 11.x only (im still at 10.3-release on my handful of machines).
You could ask on <mptcp-dev@listes.uclouvain.be>. I'd also like to see it in pfSense :) See <https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/4632>.
In any case i continue to follow all such posts with interest. ;)
:)
John