There is a lot of totalitarian shit going on, this being only one of the recent tragedies: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fshsk8MCAf4
I always try to say to myself: don’t wallow in grief, organize and act!
Except for advocating for online privacy in one’s everyday life and being politically active when I have the ability to, do you have any tips on what one can contribute with technologically, from home?
I have:
What I have found so far:
Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.
much thanks to @gary_host_laptop for the logo design :)
One simple way to run a Tor bridge: The Snowflake extension. It’s a browser extension that runs whenever you use your browser.
There is also a docker image, if you want to run it as a full-time service.
Noice.
Sweet! I will check it out immediately! :)
don’t run tor bridges, they are publicly listed (the protocol needs this) and bad, influencial people put their IPs on IP blocklists for website operators. as I know, snowflake shouldn’t be a problem.monero nodes don’t use the GPU, if you have the storage you can run a node too. maybe you don’t want to host it on the clearnet, but only as a hidden service, you could do that on Tor and I2P. make sure it’s listed on the monero.fail site
you can also run an I2P router. by just having it run in the background you contribute to the network with your bandwidth. if you have an always on computer, it’s better to run the router on that, because in I2P routers do “routing commitments”. if you just quickly shut down the router without waiting for these to expire, connections using your router will break. you don’t need to take this too seriously, but just don’t run it on the PC in public mode if you can’t solve this there
Tor bridges are explicitly NOT listed. Regular tor nodes are listed but not bridges since that would defeat the point. Publicly listed tor nodes are blocked in places where they block tor. Bridges are not listed so users who need access to tor where it’s blocked can gain access.
oh, I have mixed up bridges with relays. thanks!
Well I’ll be damned. How have I not looked into I2P before. This seems like a whole new world to explore. Thanks!
be prepared though: I2P is slow, slower than Tor, for now. that may improve with more peers but I don’t know what is the cause of the relatively low bandwidth.
also in my experience outproxies are pretty unstable, but that’s not that big of a problem because I2P is more about in-network traffic.
I2P has been slow for at least 10 years. I thought it would be faster by now. If there is any time people would be motivated, it’s now. We might see a surge in use and speed yet!
Thanks for the heads up! For now, I only want to contribute with bandwidth and decentralization, so I won’t be using the network myself. :)