X-Post from tor-relays-universities@
I ran some relays at Geman universities in the past. I guess my experiences won't help here. Maybe someone on tor-relays has experience with running a relay at an UK university, so I send this mail to tor-relays@ too.
* Duncan Guthrie schrieb am 2016-09-01 um 01:09 Uhr:
I'm hoping to run a Tor relay here at a University in the UK. Is there anyone here who might have some experience with this in the past? I have been researching legal issues but information is extremely sparse (mostly relating to the DMCA). All I can really work out is that the issues relating to ISPs apply more generally, and more strictly to a Tor exit node operator. What protections, if any, exist here in the UK for a Tor exit node operator?
Thanks, Duncan _______________________________________________ tor-relays-universities mailing list tor-relays-universities@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays-universitie...
- Duncan Guthrie schrieb am 2016-09-01 um 01:09 Uhr:
I'm hoping to run a Tor relay here at a University in the UK. Is there anyone here who might have some experience with this in the past? I have been researching legal issues but information is extremely sparse (mostly relating to the DMCA). All I can really work out is that the issues relating to ISPs apply more generally, and more strictly to a Tor exit node operator. What protections, if any, exist here in the UK for a Tor exit node operator?
On 5 Sep 2016, at 05:08, Jens Kubieziel maillist@kubieziel.de wrote:
X-Post from tor-relays-universities@
I ran some relays at Geman universities in the past. I guess my experiences won't help here. Maybe someone on tor-relays has experience with running a relay at an UK university, so I send this mail to tor-relays@ too.
I can't help with UK-specific legislation, but if it hasn't diverged too far from Australia, the answer is likely the same: "there are some legal protections for carriage services, but the protections applying to an open proxy operator have not been testing in court yet". (Of course, you should get UK-specific legal advice on that.)
One other option is to try setting up a non-exit relay first, which is what we've done recently in Australia.
Another option is to have a talk with your local police (or the relevant police group dealing with Internet activities), and let them know about Tor and your Exit relay. And let them know you don't keep any logs, and Tor can't identify the end user anyway by design. That keeps them informed, and gives them someone to contact if there are ever any concerns about your relay.
Tim
Tim Wilson-Brown (teor)
teor2345 at gmail dot com PGP C855 6CED 5D90 A0C5 29F6 4D43 450C BA7F 968F 094B ricochet:ekmygaiu4rzgsk6n xmpp: teor at torproject dot org
On Sun, Sep 4, 2016 at 8:08 PM, Jens Kubieziel maillist@kubieziel.de wrote:
X-Post from tor-relays-universities@
I ran some relays at Geman universities in the past. I guess my experiences won't help here. Maybe someone on tor-relays has experience with running a relay at an UK university, so I send this mail to tor-relays@ too.
- Duncan Guthrie schrieb am 2016-09-01 um 01:09 Uhr:
I'm hoping to run a Tor relay here at a University in the UK. Is there anyone here who might have some experience with this in the past? I have been researching legal issues but information is extremely sparse (mostly relating to the DMCA). All I can really work out is that the issues relating to ISPs apply more generally, and more strictly to a Tor exit node operator. What protections, if any, exist here in the UK for a Tor exit node operator?
The Tor Exits / relays I operate in the UK are done so in my capacity as an ISP which as you mention has various protections.
Are you planning on doing this officially as part of the university ( https://ins.jku.at/infrastructure/tor-exit-node ) or are you a student / faculty who wants to run a relay on spare hardware (and is therefore at the will of the University AUP etc)?
I don't think you'll find any explicit protections in law and may even find yourself at the receiving end of being designated a "communications service provider" (especially so once the Investigatory Powers Bill comes into force!)
tor-relays@lists.torproject.org