There are a few talks on youtube that
explain this a little. The Chinese are pretty successful blocking
bridges. The last thing I heard was that they will send every
server which creates a SSL connection so someone in China a
Tor-Handshake and block it if it responds.
In other countries bridges aren't needed this might explain the little use. Am 01.08.13 23:32, schrieb Tyler Durden: Well you are just a bridge.. Don't expect tons of traffic. P.s: For a bridge this is already "a lot" of traffic. Greetings Am 01.08.2013 23:11, schrieb Shawn A. Miller:I've been running a Tor bridge on the Amazon EC2 cloud computing platform (per instructions at https://cloud.torproject.org/) since July 27, and while the bridge is up and running according to the logs, there doesn't seem to be much traffic running through it, i.e., latest logs indicate Tor uptime is 2 days 12 hours with 2 circuits open; 6.6 MB sent and 45.75 MB received. Have I somehow managed to misconfigure the bridge or is this normal? Best, Shawn _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays_______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays --
Matthias Redies Helene-Mayer-Ring 12 80809 München PGP-Key: http://homepages.physik.uni-muenchen.de/~m.redies/EA97E71E.asc |
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