> If you run a Tor node at your home IP address you will loose the > positive side effect of a dynamic IP address and your IP layer anonymity > decreases to that of a static IP address because your node identity > links all your public IP addresses.
Many (most) residential ISP's allocate their users from DHCP, technically dynamic. Yet DHCP keys off the user's MAC address, and preferentially, if available, assigns the user their most recently used IP from the database in response to a DISCOVER/REQUEST. Been a while since checked, but I think this is also true if the lease is expired and there is no demand to recycle the former address. So the user is often effectively static. Some users defeat this nature of DHCP and obtain a different IP on demand by installing a new MAC. It is not clear whether ISP's will gravitate towards providing static or dynamic when they start delivering IPv6. For those users who do, by whatever means, end up with a different IP address each time they go online, and who wish to avoid tracking across said IP changes by regenerating their Tor keys each time... what is the minimum recommended time that such a node needs to become and remain useful in the Tor network? Sub hour, hours, day, days? _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
