Am 13.02.2011 00:54, schrieb Matthew:
Incidentally, in http://torstatus.blutmagie.de/ gpfTOR4 is listed as
being in the Czech Republic while gpfTOR5 and gpfTOR6 are in
Netherlands. Is this correct?
Yes, coorect.
In the last years we see much less trouble by using non-German ISPs for
our Tor
On 13/02/11 21:03, Karsten N. wrote:
Am 13.02.2011 00:54, schrieb Matthew:
Incidentally, in http://torstatus.blutmagie.de/ gpfTOR4 is listed as
being in the Czech Republic while gpfTOR5 and gpfTOR6 are in
Netherlands. Is this correct?
Yes, coorect.
In the last years we see much less
On 09/02/11 09:06, Karsten N. wrote:
Am 07.02.2011 20:00, schrieb Matthew:
I am wondering to what degree people on this list have problems with
e-mails going into spam folders because they are using tor nodes.
Many Tor nodes are listet in some anti-spam DNSBL. We have had a
discussion here
Am 07.02.2011 20:00, schrieb Matthew:
I am wondering to what degree people on this list have problems with
e-mails going into spam folders because they are using tor nodes.
Many Tor nodes are listet in some anti-spam DNSBL. We have had a
discussion here about SORBS DNSBL some times ago. All tor
Am 09.02.2011 10:06, schrieb Karsten N.:
(I did found an other solution for SMTP)
Sorry - I did NOT found an other solution. :-(
For webmail it is the same problem. Most webmail provider add the sender
IP address to the mail header:
Received: from 23.23.23.23
(SquirrelMail
On 09.02.2011 10:18, Karsten N. wrote:
May be, some mail providers does not add the sender IP address to the
mail header? Google Mail does not add it. Any other?
Set up your own on a server not running Tor and remove the lines
yourself. I have documented the process for Postfix:
On 09/02/2011 09:50, Moritz Bartl wrote:
May be, some mail providers does not add the sender IP address to the
mail header? Google Mail does not add it. Any other?
Set up your own on a server not running Tor and remove the lines
yourself. I have documented the process for Postfix:
On Wed, 09 Feb 2011 10:18 +0100, Karsten N.
tor-ad...@privacyfoundation.de wrote:
Am 09.02.2011 10:06, schrieb Karsten N.:
(I did found an other solution for SMTP)
Sorry - I did NOT found an other solution. :-(
For webmail it is the same problem. Most webmail provider add the sender
IP
On 07/02/11 22:53, Joe Btfsplk wrote:
On 2/7/2011 4:17 PM, Jon wrote:
I don't have any problems generally. It depends on what is in the body
of the email and what one's filters are.
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On Tue, Feb 8, 2011 at 2:07 AM, Matthew pump...@cotse.net wrote:
I didn't explain myself very well.
I meant that if matt...@yahoo.com or matt...@hotmail.com or
matt...@gmail.com or matt...@aol.com sends an e-mail to da...@yahoo.com or
da...@gmail.com or da...@aol.com or da...@hotmail.com
I am wondering to what degree people on this list have problems with
e-mails going into spam folders because they are using tor nodes.
I refer to sending from a webmail (Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, AOL, etc) to
another webmail.
It seems to me that e-mails sent from Yahoo will end up as spam.
On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 1:00 PM, Matthew pump...@cotse.net wrote:
I am wondering to what degree people on this list have problems with e-mails
going into spam folders because they are using tor nodes.
I refer to sending from a webmail (Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, AOL, etc) to
another webmail.
It
On 2/7/2011 4:17 PM, Jon wrote:
I don't have any problems generally. It depends on what is in the body
of the email and what one's filters are.
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To unsubscribe, send an e-mail to majord...@torproject.org with
unsubscribe
On 2/7/2011 1:00 PM, Matthew wrote:
I am wondering to what degree people on this list have problems with
e-mails going into spam folders because they are using tor nodes.
I refer to sending from a webmail (Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, AOL, etc) to
another webmail.
It seems to me that e-mails sent
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