My question would be this... does comcast allow their customers on residential accounts to run servers? I know with some of the cable accounts on some of the other cable networks, servers are not allowed. Yes, they will disconnect your service if it is against their TOS.
IMO: For a lot of people, $12.00 is a lot of money, especially students. But if you look at this way, you are donating bandwidth and your server to TOR and I believe if $12.00 is all you need to pay above the residential price, it is worth it. I just wished that was the case for me. It just makes me wonder if there is something else gong on here. But i degress.... On Tue, Oct 11, 2011 at 11:04 AM, Gregg Nicholas <[email protected]> wrote: > Yes, I was configured as an exit node with default outgoing ports. Incoming > ports were 80 and 443. > I'm not really serious about rejecting connections from the United States. > I'm sure that technique wouldn't prevent Comcast from figuring out that I > was running a TOR node. Just might slow them down a little. > It's frustrating when the only ISP that offers broadband service decides > that TOR is against their terms of service. (DSL is too slow to be > considered as 'broadband' in our area). In my opinion, it's time to > regulate ISPs. Just provide a connection. Don't interfere with my traffic > - and don't monitor it either. (I know it will never happen) > > Even though I agree with the ideals of the TOR project, I'm not going to > spend an extra $12 a month to run a node. > > ________________________________ _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
