Roger Dingledine commited on 2007-10-24 14:57:04
Zeige 1 geänderte Dateien mit 5 Einfügungen und 2 Löschungen.
... | ... |
@@ -261,8 +261,8 @@ coming from Tor nodes as "anonymous users," removing the ability of the |
261 | 261 |
abusers to blend in, the abusers moved back to using their open proxies |
262 | 262 |
and bot networks. </p> |
263 | 263 |
|
264 |
-<p>Second, consider that hundreds of thousands of people use Tor every |
|
265 |
-day simply for |
|
264 |
+<p>Second, consider that hundreds of thousands of <a href="<page |
|
265 |
+whousestor>">people</a> use Tor every day simply for |
|
266 | 266 |
good data hygiene — for example, to protect against data-gathering |
267 | 267 |
advertising companies while going about their normal activities. Others |
268 | 268 |
use Tor because it's their only way to get past restrictive local |
... | ... |
@@ -292,6 +292,9 @@ the overall list of nodes in the network). </p> |
292 | 292 |
directory</a>. (Note that this script won't give you a perfect list |
293 | 293 |
of IP addresses that might connect to you using Tor, since some Tor |
294 | 294 |
relays might exit from other addresses than the one they publish.) |
295 |
+For a more accurate approach (with perhaps an easier interface for |
|
296 |
+you), consider the <a href="http://exitlist.torproject.org/">TorDNSEL |
|
297 |
+service</a>. |
|
295 | 298 |
</p> |
296 | 299 |
|
297 | 300 |
<a id="TracingUsers"></a> |
298 | 301 |