> IIRC, when a node connects to another node to make a *Request, it
> provides the address + listenPort as a "callback number" to use if the
> connection goes down. So it's not actually necessary to allow
> inbound connections on arbitrary ports, for node-to-node
> communications.

If you keep the connections up to an outside node then it doesn't have to
call you back. However, this doesn't mean that everything is peachy. Any
node that finds out about you will only have your address, not the address
of the node you're talking to, so new nodes will never be able to find out
about you. Also, you have to open a bunch of connections to all the nodes
you know about whenever you start your node. If you want to be a really
useful node then you need to open up connections to *all* the nodes you
know about so that they can route messages to you at a whim. Otherwise
they'll drop you.

So it's hypothetically possible to make a modified node that will be
considerably more useful to the network but it's still won't behave
totally normally.

A solution to the problem of letting other nodes find you is the "shadow
node" proposal. If your address is relative to the addresses of other

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