Arrakis
Fri, 15 Aug 2008 21:25:52 -0700
Kyle Can you get uTorrent to work if you change the tld of address to .something ? How is the filtering taking place?
Steve Kyle Williams wrote: > On Fri, Aug 15, 2008 at 3:29 PM, Teddy Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> On Fri, 2008-08-15 at 12:33 -0600, Kasimir Gabert wrote: >>> On Fri, Aug 15, 2008 at 12:29 PM, Teddy Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>>> On Fri, 2008-08-15 at 20:18 +0200, Noiano wrote: >>>>> Hello everybody, >>>>> as you may know The Pirate Bay is being blocked in Italy for legal >>>>> issues. It's just a matter of time before all connection to all the >> TPB >>>>> servers will be blocked. Many people are suggesting to use tor+vidalia >>>>> in order to bypass the block. It's a good suggestion but, IMHO, people >>>>> care very little about just surfing thepiratebay.org. They want to >>>>> access the tracker and download ;-) . >>>>> Since I do not know the torrent protocol I wander: is it possible to >> use >>>>> tor as a "proxy" to access the tracker and get the data connections >> not >>>>> passing through tor? This would be possible if the request a client >>>>> makes to a tracker contains the non-tor ip of the client, I guess. >>>>> >>>>> Any idea is welcome. >>>>> >>>>> Noiano (from italy :-P ) >>>>> >>>>> >>>> IIRC, a few months ago someone set up a tracker as a hidden service, >>>> specifically for this kind of thing. I didn't test it myself, but some >>>> people reported success. >>>> >>> Hello, >>> >>> I think what is being talked about is something far simpler: accessing >>> TPB through Tor, but have the P2P connections not being blocked. This >>> is actually the recommended way of using Tor with P2P, and is easily >>> possible in most clients. I only know about deluge, seeing that is >>> what I use on my Ubuntu box, and all I had to do was check "Tracker >>> Proxy" in the settings, and type in my Tor SOCKS proxy. >>> >>> Let me know if this helps, and good luck! >>> Kasimir >>> >>> >> Sorry, I meant to imply that it was possible to have a torified or even >> hidden tracker, answering the OP's question of "is it possible". Thanks >> for the Deluge tip, it's my client too and as usual, it's incredibly >> simple to configure! >> >> I do see a possible risk here, though: How easy would it be for the >> MAFIAA to run hostile exits that killed connections to trackers? They >> (or their proxies, e.g., Media Defender and the like) seem exactly the >> type to do this, and they definitely have the resources. So if Tor was >> to be used as a method of bypassing tracker censorship, the trackers >> should probably be advised to run their own nodes. >> > > I've modified a torrent tracker to work exclusively with .onion addresses. > It will not work with regular IP addresses. > The tracker is bound only to localhost, and sits behind two firewalls to > block it from regular IP addresses. > I've found only one torrent client (Azureus) that allows you to use a .onion > address for a tracker and peers. > I wish uTorrent would behave the same way Azureus does, but it doesn't. > This system is in testing right now. This is running on a separate Tor > network. > Let me repeat that last part. This is NOT the normal Tor network. This is > a SEPARATE Tor network. > This has been worked here and there for about a year now. Working out the > bugs is time consuming. > So far, it works well with 7 users. > However, scalability issues are going to be inevitable and will probably be > the cause for failure down the road. > > If anyone would like to be a alpha/beta tester, e-mail me directly. >