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Re: Some legal trouble with TOR in France



On 5/16/06, Michael Holstein <michael.holstein@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I disagree though that allowing police worldwide to come up with a
"blacklist" .. first it's under the guise of "protecting children" .. so
first the porn goes there. What next? talk about drugs, sex, ?

We're supposed to be making it harder to censor, not easier.

And we do this by censoring a blacklist?

I don't have a problem with the police coming up with a "blacklist".
I don't even have a problem with people following it.  But the way I
see it Tor is about privacy, not censorship.

/mike.

PS: for those that notice the dichotomy between this and my previous
email about blocking academic journal access, this has to do not with
ideals, but practicality in getting institutional ssupport. I can handle
the police just fine, internal muckety-mucks are harder.

Personally I have more of a problem with going to jail than not being
able to convince institutions to sponsor my computing/bandwidth
expenses.  I don't think I'm alone, either.  If people could run an
exit node and still avoid getting mixed up with the law by
implementing a particular blacklist, I think the number of exit nodes
would go up dramatically.

But, as I've said in most of my replies to these threads, I don't
think such a solution is currently feasible.  Actually what would be
more feasible is a whitelist.  Maybe some exit nodes could provide a
list of the most popular exit IP addresses.

Anthony