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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 1:41 am 
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I'm not very bandwidth intensive and trying to find neat things to do with spare Linode capacity.

Anyone have any neat ideas? Looking for things that are mostly for the "greater good" like joining the NTP pool or hosting a linux distro mirror.


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 8:57 am 
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Tor ?

http://www.torproject.org/


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 12:07 pm 
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Tor would be OK if you only use it as a relay and not as an exit node. It shouldn't use too much resources, either. But if you're brave enough to set up an exit node, you'd better inform the Linode staff in advance and brace yourself for DMCA notices and unexpected accusations of child pr0n, etc. Technically, you're unlikely to get into legal trouble in the U.S. for running a Tor exit node, but I gather it can sometimes get annoying.

On the other hand, you get hundreds of GB of bandwidth included in your plan precisely because lots of people (like you) don't actually use much. If a few people served the "greater good" using leftover capacity, that would be fine, but if this were to become widespread, it might not actually serve the "greater good". So don't try to burn all your bandwidth every month. Just do what you think is good, and it will be good.


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 30, 2010 7:38 pm 
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BOINC

just kidding!


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 30, 2010 8:01 pm 
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rohanrns wrote:
I'm not very bandwidth intensive and trying to find neat things to do with spare Linode capacity.

Anyone have any neat ideas? Looking for things that are mostly for the "greater good" like joining the NTP pool or hosting a linux distro mirror.


I run a Tor relay here's some statistics for it and this is the config file.

You can also run Freenet, but it takes up a lot more resources.


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 9:08 pm 
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Location: Glendale, CA
rohanrns wrote:
I'm not very bandwidth intensive and trying to find neat things to do with spare Linode capacity.

Anyone have any neat ideas? Looking for things that are mostly for the "greater good" like joining the NTP pool or hosting a linux distro mirror.

If you want to check out ipv6 and what having a real daul stack would look like and are not able to get it from your own ISP, then configure squid proxy (with authentication or limits to your own static home ipv4 address of course) and use it when you want to see what the world would look like from a daul stack ipv4/ipv6 capable IP...

The destination website will see the traffic as coming from your linode addresses as a dual stack with IPV6 as the preferred source address. The connection from your home computer to the linode is via ipv4.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2012 1:42 pm 
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Isn't running a Tor relay supporting those who break the law?


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2012 1:51 pm 
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jebblue wrote:
Isn't running a Tor relay supporting those who break the law?


Are you implying that the only reason why one would use Tor is to break the law? 'Cause that's not true.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2012 2:55 pm 
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deleted


Last edited by zunzun on Sun Aug 04, 2013 8:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2012 4:06 pm 
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jebblue wrote:
Isn't running a Tor relay supporting those who break the law?

zunzun wrote:
Absolutely - you can use Tor to see how far you can bend the law before it breaks.

Depends on whose "law" you're talking about. Some of us would gladly support people who break Chinese or Iranian censorship laws.

Of course, a complicating factor is that people who break laws that you do care about (such as laws against child pornography) may also be able to use your Tor relay. Whether you want to tolerate such abuse is up to you. Also, there's a difference between a relay (generally okay) and an exit node (more risky, thus generally frowned upon in a shared environment). There was a very lengthy thread in this forum some time ago on this very topic.

By the way, this thread is more than 1.5 yrs old.


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PostPosted: Sat Jun 29, 2013 12:25 am 
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Burning extra bandwidth means you won't have it if you get additional traffic or if you want to add additional services to your website. I would say though if you have significant extra bandwidth, you could add some service you weren't sure if you had the resources for before. I'm thinking about adding a Warhammer 40,000 blogging service.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 03, 2013 11:17 am 
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hybinet wrote:
Tor would be OK if you only use it as a relay and not as an exit node.


But why would you do that, do they pay you or something?
I mean if the risk is having the police home for tea at least a fair return :lol:

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Last edited by jurassic on Sun Sep 22, 2013 6:19 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 03, 2013 1:31 pm 
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If you take every reasonable measure to block illegal traffic, and can prove to the police that you have, I doubt they could arrest you. This would involve strict monitoring of your logs to spot such traffic and blocking ports you notice a lot of illegal traffic on. I don't know of anything else you could do (except maybe run Clamav in the background, and post an email for DMCA complaints).

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 03, 2013 2:45 pm 
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Piki wrote:
I doubt they could arrest you.

Bwhahahahahaha, new to the real world eh?

Laws have little to nothing to do with right or wrong, it's how much money you have to hire a good lawyer PROVING that what you're accused of doesn't have a strong enough case law to result in a convection.

Being innocent, lack of hard proof, completely clean track record, has nothing to do with it.

Like with most things, a few rotten people spoil it for the rest, so although Tor is not ALL illegal traffic, enough of it is to make it "not with a ten foot pole" for anyone with common sense.

Back to the OP's question - why does EVERYTHING need to be max'd out. Be happy with what you have, use what you NEED, and don't worry about not max'ing it out.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 03, 2013 2:57 pm 
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Run tor then come complaining it's using all your resources. duh... :)


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