this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2023
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Yes we should. How would you go about doing that?
Put it in the dark web's terms of service.
Imagine trying to enforce such a thing on the dark web. What would you call the people who would end up with that job?
Start two dark webs, fill one with CP... and all the CP users will go to that one? Or something /s
Put a CP detector at dark web(no CP) exit nodes and throttle the speed to shit when triggered?
Oh yeah, packet sniffing exit nodes in a privacy oriented network will surely go down well and will have no unforeseen consequences
It's been working fine for 20+ years already, with consequences foreseen from the beginning:
If you want to hide your porn habits from your techie flatmate with a logging router, Tor works great. If you're a CIA agent in Iran wanting to send some report back home without getting found out, Tor works great. If you're a whistleblower wanting to send an anonymous tip to the Washington Post, Tor also works great. If you're curious to see that foreign mercenary group's website that's blocked in your country... SWIM had to try some different circuits, but Tor also worked there.
What do you mean? The exit nodes runners are doing the heavy lifting here. It's fair for them to do everything technically possible to avoid unwanted raids.
Lol
I mean it's an exit node and the open web you don't really get to complain about lack of privacy when leaving Tor.
OTOH, there's a simple problem: That traffic is still likely encrypted. It's not like Tor exit nodes do the TLS handshake, do they? That would indeed be much stranger than applying traffic shaping.
Sure, but preinstalling packet snooping on exit nodes as a feature still doesn't sound like a great move, nevermind how stupid the idea is exactly because, like you said, HTTPS is a thing