Jordan dijo [Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 11:01:28AM -0700]: > I've had a similar experience at my university in the states. While they > acknowledge overall public benefit, I was denied, citing the overhead of > abuse complaints and "potential for subverting university firewalls" (their > words...) as justification for rejection. > > They did, however, note if I were to bring my own addresses, they might be > able to convince the board of regents network administrators to announce my > prefix and allow me to handle complaints on my own. They perceived my > potential leveraging of university transit as exclusive and distinct (and > more secure?) than polluting their precious (and largely unused) /16, and > had no interest in granting a lowly undergrad access to their beloved > sanctuary.
"Bringing your own address"? Well, I will look into how to get that. I guess I could try again asking my university network to route my non-university's block (we have two almost full /16s; I was requesting an IP in a third range we have that's not usually associated with the university). _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
