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Tor Anonymity Network Reaches 100 Verified Nodes

James A. Y. Joyce writes "Tor is an onion routing anonymous network. It routes your data transfers through a series of encrypted links between random nodes in the network; the greater the number of nodes, the greater the anonymity afforded. To commemorate the 100th verified node in the Tor network, the EFF are putting up a request for other organisations and personal users to start up Tor nodes of their own. (Tor has been mentioned on Slashdot twice before.)"

6 of 332 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Issues of running a Tor node by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    yea, wont somebody please think of the children?

    Terrorism Networks like this would make it easy and untracable for terrorists to send their commuinications without being traced to a location.
    Do you not want to help civil rights campaigners in China defeat political suppression? Do you not want to help the Iraqi people fight against American terrorism and get their country back from the evil empire?

  2. Re:Issues of running a Tor node by mincognito · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes anonymous internet use should be banned. Thank you for your insightful post Mr. Coward.

  3. Screw the children! by poptones · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And screw the chinese. It amazes me how people still drag out this inflamed and rancid red herring every time there is a discussion of anonymity on the net.

    Remember when it was SUPPOSED to be about freedom of speech? Yeah even when it's the "bad" kind. Look how they keep these kiddie porn pictures locked away where only a tiny few detectives and the pervs who obsessively seek out the images can find them. When they FINALLY admit defeat and roll out a few carefully altered pictures worldwide in an unprecedented "have you seen this place" (still cannot see the kid who probably could have been identified much quicker) they find out the guy was locked up and the girl has been safe now for YEARS!

    How many years did she go on being abused because the friends and neighbors of this kid never had the chance to identify her?

    Now, having said that let me remind you of something else: "child porn" is a moving target and especially in the US there is a VERY heavy footed march toward defining anyone under the age of 18 as a "child."

    And the primary motivation for this is NOT to stop at "child porn" but to stamp out every modeling site and every ADULT porn publisher by overloading them and binding them with red tape and overzealous, politically correct "laws" brought about through uniting the most intrusive elements of the right wing religious nuts and the left wing feminist nuts. The door was thrown open decades ago when the court said "intent" was good enough for prosecution even in cases of pictures where no "harm" was done to the children and that was all about one thing: punishing people for beiung who they are and not punishing them for their actions.

    I've said this before here and people go "oh they can';t get away with tat we have the supreme court" well yeah, it was the SCOTUS that sent down the first ruling and did so even in a much more liberal atmosphere, think of how that might go today. Better yet just look around, watch the news over the next few weeks and you will see it being played out right before you.

    In germany magazines target at 13 to 15 year olds have frontal nudity and articles on buying condoms and giving head. They prepare kids for adulthood and recognize their right to their own bodies and their own sexuality. In the US and UK the political machination is moving in the exact opposite direction, seeking to strip away even adults from their inalienable liberty of self.

    Just watch... you'll see soon enough.

  4. Re:What about the jerks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are hundreds of methods for abusing cars as well. I could drive my car through a crowded flea market every Tuesday wearing sunglasses and using stolen license plates. That's both abusive and anonymous. But it's not a reason to take away cars. Or sunglasses. Or license plates. Or the screwdrivers used to steal and install license plates. Or flea markets. Neither is potential abuse a reason to take away anonymity.

  5. You did forget one by Kythe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    5: Ordinary citizens who don't want their private information viewed/used against them either by hackers or by law enforcement personnel who abuse their power

    The more law enforcement is simply trusted to do the right thing, the more you will have bad apples who don't. The phrase "power corrupts" describes a very real phenomenon.

    --

    Kythe
  6. Re:That's a superficial argument. by JadeNB · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your ability to speak your mind freely is not impeded by a flood of spam and crap posts. Your ability to find the information you want, and the ability of other users to find the (presumably valuable) information you have provided, is indeed impeded -- but, while self-expression is a fundamental right, the `right to be heard' is not. If the price of a Chinese citizen's right to criticise his government was that I could no longer criticise mine (which, as an American, I increasingly am not allowed to do anyway), then that would be an illegitimate trade-off; but surely if the price of that same right is that I have to sort through a few (or very many) more messages to get to the ones I want, then it is selfish in the extreme to claim that the price is too high for me to pay. It is not that a Chinese citizen is `more equal' than I, only that a huge benefit accrues for a relatively small price.