Steve Langasek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Hi folks, [...] > On the subject of collateral damage: some will point out that tor is a > service with legitimate applications, including some that are close to the > heart of many on this list, such as protection against invasion of privacy > by corporations, defense against persecution by totalitarian governments, > and freedom of association for at-risk women. While these are all valid > uses of tor, I believe the intersection of these uses with posting to the > debian-women mailing list is approximately zero: while we don't want to be > responsible for preventing such people from contributing to Debian in > general, there's no need for them to be able to post to debian-women in the > process, and in many cases it's probably safer for them if they don't do so. > I'm not aware of any legitimate posters to this list that are using tor when > sending mail, and I can't think of any realistic cases in which it would be > necessary for someone to do so.
Could it be possible to also add a whitelist for the (improbable) case when someone have a legitimate reason for it? Such a person will have to contact someone to ask to be added, and addition will be manual. It's inconvenient for him, but as it is improbable, it is not really a problem. By the way, such a whitelist could be added only when needed. -- Rémi Vanicat -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

