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Re: [tor-relays] Determining geographical locations for a new exit relay would help most



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I would love to see some more nodes in Australia. I'm located in Perth and the speed of the network it horrible. Not usable for day to day internet which is unfortunate, hopefully it will pick up soon.

I might look into setting up a node here as my only running one is located out of Australia
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On 2 May 2015 at 05:00, Seth <list@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Fri, 01 May 2015 10:01:45 -0700, nusenu <nusenu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
It might be oversimplified but using compass with group by country
ordered by consensus weight (or in your case exit probability) shows
you where most of tor network capacity is currently located. The goal
is to setup relays in new or rarely used locations.

So by using compass your list would look like this, ordered from
better to less good:

* (AU) Sydney, Australia (0.01% CW)
* (Asia) Tokyo, Japan (0.8% CW)
* UK (4.6% CW)
* US (10.1%)
* NL (12.4% CW)
* France (21.6%)
* DE (25.7% CW)
Note: the is a current snapshot and numbers change but AU or JP is
better then DE (from a capacity divers. point of view) - this will
also be the case in a week or a month.

You might also want to consider the exit probability and use that in
addition or instead of CW.

I don't know if VULTR has multiple ASes but if they do you might also
want to have a look at the group by AS results (if they allow you to
choose).

Thanks for the breakdown, that helps. The only hitch with the Sydney and Toyko locations is that instead of 1000GB/mo of bandwidth, you only get 200GB/mo.

Would it be better (all things considered) to go with the UK location at 1000GB/mo vs Tokyo or Sydney at 200GB/mo?

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