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Re: Some Bones to Pick with Tor Admins



Bit of a problem there (with long text lines).  If I want to be able to send http links to friends/
colleagues/family, I have to turn off the new line feature in my email client and allow end-user
email clients deal with formatting (all too often, if you have auto-formatting/new lines setup,
you will totally bork http links).  

What client are you using that is causing a problem?  Mutt?

On Wednesday 11 February 2009 19:48:41 Scott Bennett wrote:
>      On Wed, 11 Feb 2009 07:49:05 -0500 Praedor Atrebates <praedor@xxxxxxxxx>
> top-posted:
> >Looks like I may have to create a procmail filter to pre-dump posts.
> >
> >Money may be tight now (for lots of peeps) but one should be able to acquire a much more modern windoze for virtually nothing.  SE?  SE?!!!  Why not run win95?  Or 3.5?
> >
> >If you are REALLY hurting for money: LINUX!  Download and install a free version - pick a distro.  ANY modern linux will do much more than SE can, you wont miss anything but viruses and trojans (though anyone foolish enough to still run SE doesn't give a f*ck about the trojans and other hacks part of the equation). If you have SE on something, it is sure as hell you aren't running anything demanding on it (by modern Homo sapiens standards).  SE dates back to the Homo erectus period.
> 
>      Do you suppose you could avoid putting entire paragraphs onto single
> lines of text?
>      LINUX is certainly an option, but don't forget the BSDs.  FreeBSD 7, for
> example, is very fast.  For those with multi-CPU or multi-cored CPUs, FreeBSD 7
> and 8-CURRENT have the *only* efficient kernels for heavy CPU loads.  (See
> http://www.freebsd.org.)  PC-BSD 7 is a particular packaging of FreeBSD 7 that
> is especially designed to be newbie-friendly.  (See www.pcbsd.org.)
>      In any case, there is simply no excuse for running tor on unsafe operating
> systems that no longer get security updates.  If the OP would identify his
> tor relay by nickname or key fingerprint, I would be happy to add it to my
> ExcludeNodes list for my own protection.  Also, a machine like the one
> described by the OP cannot contribute much data rate capacity to the tor
> network anyway, so if he were to take it offline permanently, it would be no
> great loss to the tor community and would have the benefit of removing an
> unsafe relay from the network.
> 
> 
>                                   Scott Bennett, Comm. ASMELG, CFIAG
> **********************************************************************
> * Internet:       bennett at cs.niu.edu                              *
> *--------------------------------------------------------------------*
> * "A well regulated and disciplined militia, is at all times a good  *
> * objection to the introduction of that bane of all free governments *
> * -- a standing army."                                               *
> *    -- Gov. John Hancock, New York Journal, 28 January 1790         *
> **********************************************************************
> 
> 

-- 
"An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailment of all republics."
--Plutarch