If by that you mean why there are fewer relays than there are tor users (clients), I’d say there are several reasons for this. Not everybody can run a relay, it requires having a router that can smoothly handle the load (or data center), an ISP that allows relays to be run, and not every person who uses tor has that. Far from everybody who installs the tor browser on their computer configures a relay for those reasons and because they don’t want to donate their internet speed. It’s a shame as the network would be faster and stronger otherwise, but that is the case.
Try tor stack exchange (https://tor.stackexchange.com/) There are loads other questions about operating the tor software with answers, and you can ask a question yourself. Cheers. From: I I wish I'd known that this is not the place to learn Linux or really how to run a node securely and efficiently. Perhaps an acknowledgement of that might bring some other pages or styles of the current pages. I'd like to see a collection of correct answers perhaps searchable but restricted and monitored. There are some brilliant people who help but there are others who say less useful things and there's nothing stopping them. Has anyone wondered why the number of nodes is so incredibly low? Rob _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays |
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