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this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2023
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Technology
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And I'm running 2 relay nodes. The TOR network desperately needs exit nodes to relieve the bottleneck at the exits, and that's where I want to help.
Of course, it's not for everyone, which is why one could just donate to the TOR foundation (or whatever they are called) and that money goes into infrastructure.
I'm not a native speaker, I assumed obfuscate meant hiding the IP address. I mentioned it because you asked.
I didn't make a new account just for this lol, it's just that I'm passionate about it.
The Tor network was designed for spies. In particular, for US&friends spies to have a plausible deniability when "phoning home". It is pretty much guaranteed to have exit nodes with a traffic capacity of "whatever spies need × whatever amount is needed to preserve plausible deniability".
That means it doesn't "desperately need" exit nodes, the required amount of exit nodes keeps being financed by the spy agencies involved. Overhead capacity just happens to be a nice thing for everyone, but is not a goal, so non-sponsored exit nodes that provide extra capacity, run all the risks, without any of the protections of some higher-ups waving any denounces away.
If you think you can run an exit node as a non-sponsored/protected individual, go for it... but the chances are not in your favor. Donating to the Tor foundation is much safer, buy I don't think they host exit nodes either, they just develop the software (which is also important).
Relay nodes are mostly safe, since there is no way for you to know any of the traffic, and they don't link your IP to any of it, while they do help with the overall robustness and capacity of the network. Relay nodes also add capacity when accessing hidden sites, without running any of the risks.
"Obfuscating" means to make it hard to find out, while "hiding" means there is no way to find it out, at all.
And you did make a new account, it's visible in the "about" info. The account hasn't had any other interactions either... but whatever.