grarpamp: > So many sites that we all use are now blacklisting Tor. It's unclear > whether it is via their use of tools that blindly utilize blacklists, > or if they are making a conscious choice to deny Tor users. As far > as I'm concerned, we are all legitimate users of their services and > quite frankly, I've had enough... exactly the same as I'm sure you > have all had.
try placing an ad on Gumtree you must post it from an *IP* of the country you are placing an ad about if you then use a *Tor exit node for that country* still no go and all support ticket requests are autocratically ignored and closed without reasoning - officially worse than Go Daddy & love responding quickly and craply (when they do respond) reading their support responses from another different IP? tst tst tst using a different browser user agent ? naughty naughty - they fingerprint & assign you a lovely machID but its not like their parent companies ebay/paypal in that you have already given them verifiable personal information for fraud prevention; Gumtree was an experience OTT time for that lawyer ... > > What can we do, as a collective social entity, to put an end to > this madness? It is not as if we, as Tor users, present any more > of a load upon their help/fraud/abuse desks than the wider open > internet as a whole, even when if perhaps adjusted for market share > of source IP's. So what can we do? > > This is in re: Hulu (whis is presumably authenticated)... but really, > it applies to any service which we, the legitimate users of Tor, > are denied access to. > > It has simply gone too far and we should be putting effort into > reversing this trend by interacting with these deniers to become > permitters. > > What do we do? > -- tor-talk mailing list - [email protected] To unsubscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
