On 24 Sep 2014, at 13:38 , tor-relays-request@lists.torproject.org wrote:
Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2014 05:40:00 +0200 From: Moritz Bartl moritz@torservers.net To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org Subject: Re: [tor-relays] Estimating the value and cost of the Tor network
Hi,
Prices vary widely across different countries. We pay between $400 and $1500 per Gbit/s per month in "popular and cheap locations". In a scenario where we want to grow the network and at least keep the current geographical diversity (or even grow it), we'd have to at least equally strengthen less fortunate locations.
The list of the top 20 countries [0] contains countries such as Russia, Poland, Norway and Hungary, where international bandwidth is quite expensive. Hopefully someone from this list can help us compile or find estimates for pricing per country. It would be interesting to learn the prices even for mid-size (~50-100Mbit/s+) relays in any country outside of the top five countries, even more so for crazy places that don't make the top 20.
Another factor that we should not ignore is that, while it may be possible to find a set of ISPs that allow mid-size exit relays, it gets harder the more traffic you push, because of the additional workload (and scariness) for the ISP from complaints.
[0] https://compass.torproject.org/
-- Moritz Bartl https://www.torservers.net/
Mike, Moritz,
Re: crazy places that don't make the top 20
I've noticed that most of the Tor network is concentrated in the northern hemisphere, particularly Europe and North America. I assume the distribution of authorities is similar.
Apart from China, no Asia-Pacific country makes the top 20 in Tor compass.[1] And no southern hemisphere country makes the top 20 at all.
The first Asia-Pacific countries after China are Japan at #29, then Singapore at #37. And unless I've missed something, the first southern hemisphere country is Australia at #42.
Details aside, I'd love to see more routers and exits in countries other than the top 4 (Germany, France, Netherlands, United States). This helps spread failure risk, sovereign risk, and the risk from 3 letter agencies and the like.
And it would make Tor faster for those in the southern hemisphere, Africa, and the Asia-pacific.
But I don't know how much hope there is for this - I've tried to find pricing in Australia, and the figures I've found are:
$8000 per month for 100Mbps.[2] $1500 per month for 25Mbps.[3] $800 per month for 10Mbps.[4]
That seems ridiculously pricey…
I'd rather wait for the National Broadband Network and run one on 100Mbps fibre at 1% of the price.[5] (Except bandwidth would not be guaranteed on a "home"-style plan.)
Time to find a sympathetic university?
Tim
[1]: https://compass.torproject.org/?family=&ases=&exits=all_relays&b... [2]: http://www.intervolve.com.au/datacentre/ [3]: http://www.exetel.com.au/corporate/ip-transit-colocation [4]: https://www.xhostsolutions.com.au/services/dedicated-server-unmetered.cfm [5]: http://delimiter.com.au/2014/04/03/unlimited-100mbps-89-99-tpg-equals-top-nb...
* Tim schrieb am 2014-09-24 um 08:32 Uhr:
But I don't know how much hope there is for this - I've tried to find pricing in Australia, and the figures I've found are: $8000 per month for 100Mbps.[2] $1500 per month for 25Mbps.[3] $800 per month for 10Mbps.[4]
That fits to the numbers Cloudflare provided recently. They wrote in their blog post, that Australia is the most expensive region:
/****************************************************************************/ /* To give you some sense of how out-of-whack Australia is, at CloudFlare */ /* we pay about as much every month for bandwidth to serve all of Europe as */ /* we do to for Australia. That’s in spite of the fact that approximately */ /* 33x the number of people live in Europe (750 million) versus Australia */ /* (22 million). */ /****************************************************************************/ from URL:https://blog.cloudflare.com/the-relative-cost-of-bandwidth-around-the-world/
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