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Re: [tor-relays] Why is my fast relay so slow to gain popularity?
On 2013-09-11 18:20 , Jesse Victors wrote:
>
> Hello everyone, newcomer here.
>
> I'm behind very fast connection (11.5 MB/sec down, 7.5 MB/sec up)
(Most folks would just call that 100mbit, that is if your MB is
MegaByte, hence why 11.5 MiB/s would be more accurate).
> thought that the Tor network could benefit from my connection,
Definitely!
> especially since it's apparently been under high load recently. Per the
> latest blog posts, I downloaded the beta TBB and configured it as a
> relay under Linux. It's been up for almost two days now, yet it's still
> being utilized at a very, very small fraction of it's potential.
This blog post from today explains the effect and reasoning:
https://blog.torproject.org/blog/lifecycle-of-a-new-relay
> In the
> network map, I see that my relay has an advertised speed which is again
> much slower than it actually can be.
IMHO that label should be changed to 'measured speed' as the bwauths
take care of that now.
> To my knowledge, a web server can
> be put under full load right away, and distributing computing projects
> use the most of your computer right off the bat. Why doesn't Tor run
> computational and/or bandwidth tests and advertise my relay at a much
> more actual speed?
The bwauths do that, but they don't run very often.
> I don't see why a fast relay has to start at the very
> bottom of the barrel to begin with.
Because otherwise introducing a large set of fast relays and thus hurt
anonymity.
(On the other side a determined adversary just waits a bit longer)
Greets,
Jeroen
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