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[or-cvs] added the rest of the anchors to faq-abuse.html



Update of /home2/or/cvsroot/website
In directory moria:/tmp/cvs-serv27485

Modified Files:
	faq-abuse.html 
Log Message:
added the rest of the anchors to faq-abuse.html


Index: faq-abuse.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /home2/or/cvsroot/website/faq-abuse.html,v
retrieving revision 1.8
retrieving revision 1.9
diff -u -d -r1.8 -r1.9
--- faq-abuse.html	8 Jun 2005 02:03:26 -0000	1.8
+++ faq-abuse.html	8 Jun 2005 02:37:51 -0000	1.9
@@ -57,8 +57,8 @@
 <p>Tor aims to provide protection for ordinary people who want to follow
 the law. Only criminals have privacy right now; we need to fix that. </p>
 
-<a name="Tradeoff"></a>
-<h3>Isn't it just a tradeoff: accepting the bad uses for the good ones?</h3>
+<a id="Tradeoff"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#Tradeoff">Isn't it just a tradeoff: accepting the bad uses for the good ones?</a></h3>
 
 <p>No, we don't think that's how it works in the case of Tor. </p>
 
@@ -81,8 +81,8 @@
 and other privacy measures can <em>fight</em> identity theft, physical
 crimes like stalking, and so on. </p>
 
-<a name="DDoS"></a>
-<h3>What about distributed denial of service attacks?</h3>
+<a id="DDoS"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#DDoS">What about distributed denial of service attacks?</a></h3>
 
 <p>Distributed denial of service attacks typically rely on having a group
 of thousands of computers all sending floods of traffic to a victim. Since
@@ -102,8 +102,8 @@
 much aggregate throughput you can eke out of it, then come back to us
 if you're still worried. </p>
 
-<a name="WhatAboutSpammers"></a>
-<h3>What about spammers?</h3>
+<a id="WhatAboutSpammers"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#WhatAboutSpammers">What about spammers?</a></h3>
 
 <p>The simple answer: The default Tor exit policy rejects all outgoing
 port 25 (SMTP) traffic. So sending spam mail through Tor isn't going to
@@ -120,8 +120,8 @@
 Tor's public key operations, etc, makes it not economically worthwhile
 for them to use Tor. </p>
 
-<a name="ExitPolicies"></a>
-<h3>How do Tor exit policies work?</h3>
+<a id="ExitPolicies"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#ExitPolicies">How do Tor exit policies work?</a></h3>
 
 <p>Each Tor server has an exit policy that specifies what sort of
 outbound connections are allowed or refused from that server. The exit
@@ -132,8 +132,8 @@
 <p>This way each server can decide the services he wants to allow
 connections to, based on abuse potential and his own situation. </p>
 
-<a name="HowMuchAbuse"></a>
-<h3>Does Tor get much abuse?</h3>
+<a id="HowMuchAbuse"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#HowMuchAbuse">Does Tor get much abuse?</a></h3>
 
 <p>Not much, in the grand scheme of things. We've been running the network
 since October 2003, and it's only generated a handful of complaints. Of
@@ -148,8 +148,8 @@
 well</a>, we feel that we're doing pretty well at striking a balance
 currently. </p>
 
-<a name="TypicalAbuses"></a>
-<h3>So what should I expect if I run a server?</h3>
+<a id="TypicalAbuses"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#TypicalAbuses">So what should I expect if I run a server?</a></h3>
 
 <p>If you run a Tor server that allows exit connections (such as the
 default exit policy), it's probably safe to say that you will eventually
@@ -193,8 +193,8 @@
 them, and teach your friends (if they use them) to avoid them too.</li>
 </ul>
 
-<a name="IrcBans"></a>
-<h3>Tor is banned from the IRC network I want to use.</h3>
+<a id="IrcBans"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#IrcBans">Tor is banned from the IRC network I want to use.</a></h3>
 
 <p>Sometimes jerks make use of Tor to troll IRC channels. This abuse
 results in IP-specific temporary bans ("klines" in IRC lingo), as the
@@ -247,8 +247,8 @@
 so that others can share.  At least one IRC network consults that page
 to unblock exit nodes that have been blocked inadvertently. </p>
 
-<a name="SMTPBans"></a>
-<h3>Your nodes are banned from the mail server I want to use.</h3>
+<a id="SMTPBans"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#SMTPBans">Your nodes are banned from the mail server I want to use.</a></h3>
 
 <p>Even though <a href="#WhatAboutSpammers">Tor isn't useful for
 spamming</a>, some over-zealous blacklisters seem to think that all
@@ -258,8 +258,8 @@
 blacklists to refuse incoming mail, you should have a conversation with
 them and explain how Tor works. </p>
 
-<a name="Bans"></a>
-<h3>I want to ban the Tor network from my service.</h3>
+<a id="Bans"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#Bans">I want to ban the Tor network from my service.</a></h3>
 
 <p>First, ask yourself if there's a way to do application-level decisions
 to separate the legitimate users from the jerks. For example, you might
@@ -292,8 +292,8 @@
 python script to parse the Tor directory <a
 href="http://tor.eff.org/cvs/tor/contrib/exitlist";>here</a>. </p>
 
-<a name="LegalQuestions"></a>
-<h3>I have legal questions about Tor abuse.</h3>
+<a id="LegalQuestions"></a>
+<h3><a class="anchor" href="#LegalQuestions">I have legal questions about Tor abuse.</a></h3>
 
 <p>We're only the developers. We can answer technical questions, but
 we're not the ones to talk to about legal questions or concerns. </p>