> Yelp is based in San Francisco. So is Pinterest. Getting the Wikimedia > Foundation (also based in San Francisco) to come over would be a huge > victory, IMO.
I'd bet there is room for some one day presentations in the big corporate cities, sf, nyc, chi and so on. Find the businesses and invite them. >> Noticed a recent surge of sites using CloudFlare. > They don't > block Tor per se, they rate limit connections/request per IP address. I seem to be denied with them, but that could be the apparrent effect of a stern rate limit. So I need to do better and copy the message/screens to the list. I often give up though. > While I don't agree with this model, it seems consistent with how they > treat Tor. I can connect to cloudflare sites by forcing circuits to > exit through non-busy exit relays just fine. Tor is already slow. So though silly, a rate limit is probably better than a universal Tor block. My main issue with sites that are Tor aware and then take action against Tor nodes specifically, is that most seem to say they get attacks, spam, illegal stuff from Tor. While true, that is a drop in the pond when compared to from the internet at large. Yet they don't block the internet, the coffee shops, the cable ranges, Romania, etc. It's the being dumb about the net and the kneejerk and the push to privacy destroying phone based auth. Hopefully with some group talks maybe some good will happen. _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
