Yes, but the point of flash proxies, is to use them as bridges, what I meant is to allow OR's behind NAT to be relays or even exit nodes.
2014/1/20 David Fifield <[email protected]> > On Mon, Jan 20, 2014 at 05:00:38PM -0200, Juan Berner wrote: > > 1) Allow NAT clients to be TOR relay nodes (even maybe exit nodes) , > this would > > be done using a queue system, possibly in a hidden service but not > necessary, > > where nat relay nodes can query what tor clients want to connect to them > and > > initiate the connection. This would allow more nodes in the TOR network. > > This is how flash proxy works. Clients register themselves as needing a > connection, and then proxies connect to the clients. (The problem is > that many *clients* are also behind NAT, and then it doesn't work so > well.) > > You can run a flash proxy just by going to a web page like > http://crypto.stanford.edu/flashproxy/, and there is also code to run a > proxy in the background without a browser: > https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/7944. > > David Fifield >
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