Thank you @Gamby for echoing my sentiment. 

While there can be a good tech reason for considering small relays useless, the 
small relay operators MUST be properly and openly advised about how useful or 
useless their relays are. I even have read about someone's suggestion of 
gamification of such feedback - which I think is a damn good idea , eg give 
people badges based on how USEFUL their relays are.

I heard here an idea that it's good that a lot of people run relays because 
their joining the party increases the size of the crowd that supports privacy. 
Well, a global crowd of 7000 is a pathetically small one considering the 
target, and people should run relays not because this makes them feel good 
about themselves but because they are convinced that their relays are being 
USED for a good purpose. If the small relays are largely unused (eg if 10% of 
the relays carry 90% of the Tor traffic - does anyone have an exact statistics 
on this?) and if, in addition,  there is no increased anonymity benefit in 
having a lot of small relays, then why bother? 


-----Original Message-----
From: tor-relays [mailto:tor-relays-boun...@lists.torproject.org] On Behalf Of 
Gumby
Sent: Friday, December 23, 2016 6:06 PM
To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
Subject: Re: [tor-relays] Unwarranted discrimination of relays with dynamic IP

I have followed this for some time with interest, because I've run 2 relays 
from "home" connections for over 2 years - at on point three, all on unused 
older laptops. I have an Archer C7 which can handle 31k connections 
(theoretically) and have never had issues. My IP address changes maybe 3 times 
a year.
    I am set at 1 mb up/down - largely unused compared to its capacity, but I 
really don't care as long as it runs. I have had as many as 3700 connections 
but usually 150 or so. I still do not care - I have felt that this still 
provides for someone, somewhere.
    I will continue, without getting upset over unused "horsepower". 
With that said however - if the authority feels I am pathetically useless 
(reminds me of the testosterone ego of high school jocks) then what would 
happen if all the small relays - like me - say piss on it? At what point does 
this entire Tor freedom concept become the field of rich, unlimited bandwidth 
mavens?

And incidentally, those jocks would never had graduated if not for the "nerds" 
that tutored them - the little guys provide a hell of a lot more than people 
realize.

Gumby

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