>> Which is why I stopped running a relay - waaaay too many people poking >> at my machine. In retrospect I was probably just incredibly naive, >> but when I put up a tor relay I was expecting to just relay tor >> traffic. I did not sign up to be the target of any wannabe pen >> tester. > > For me it is quite clear that by setting up a tor relay I highly expose the > server and make it target for scanning and more. Therefore I am personally > happy with scanning my servers by tor friendly people. I don't regard this an > attack but as a helpful service to the community of tor relay operators.
Putting these two another way... The internet is probed a hundred times a day for any number of reasons. Any IP you light up is subject to it. And not only that, but it will have active, intentional and evil exploits thrown at it. Anyone not knowing this seriously needs to find a sniffer and run it. So to the people who whine of being packeted like it's some sort of outrage... get real and shut up. If it bothers you, report it. Others are happy throwing up a filter (or not) and forgetting it. And if you get cracked, or receive a friendly vulnerability email, consider it a blessing. The net is just noise in logs rarely read. What are you going to do when someone reads this thread and decides to do the project anyway? What if they do it anonymously for fun? What if they are already doing it? What if you don't know about it? Welcome to the net. _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
