That was exactly my point, thank you Anemoi. This is the case all over the 
world, not just in Germany. Unfortunately there seems to be a culture of 
shooting the messenger here, or accusing him of being “aggressive”, 
“accusatory”, “claiming entitlement”  or (my favorite) “lacking programming 
skills”, in addition to politely phrased suggestions to ditch my relay and  pay 
for a VPS with a fixed IP. 
 
The idea of running a volunteer based network for public good is to use every 
possible resource offered by volunteers, and if DirAuth algorithms need to be 
adapted for this, such proposal should be taken seriously. I for one am 
positive that a huge amount of bandwidth that could have been be donated, is 
lost this way.
 
If this does not make technical sense (which I doubt but I may be wrong), 
rephrasing the guidelines and officially saying on the Tor page that operators 
behind dynamic IP are only welcome if they run bridges would be fine – but this 
isn’t not the case as of now. I hope Tor developers or whoever runs the Tor 
project are reading this.
 
From: tor-relays [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Sunday, December 04, 2016 9:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [tor-relays] Unwarranted discrimination of relays with dynamic IP
 
In Germany, it's quite usual that you have a dynamic IP and unusual that you 
have static IP. Not just a few relays are located in Germany.  It's not just a 
question of frustration of owners of dynamic IP relay, but also a matter of 
bandwith waste. If Tor cannot handle dynamic IPs properly a lot of bandwith is 
not used. And bandwith is something that the Tor network can not get enough of. 
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