P2P traffic putting enormous strain on Tor network

James Delahunty
14 Oct 2005 15:12

Tor, an anonymity tool from the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is being misused by many file sharers to make their BitTorrent clients run through the system, providing them with anonymity and a shield against the RIAA and MPAA. Tor allows people to anonymize their web browsing, instant messaging, IRC use and other things that use the TCP protocol. How it behaves is simple, communication is bounced around a network of servers called onion routers making it hard to trace the source or destination of data packets.
Now BitTorrent users are reconfiguring their BT clients to take advantage of the anonymity provided by Tor, to attempt to share and download material anonymously. This is putting an enormous strain on the network of servers and as a result is hindering performance. One of the main aims of the EFF is protect Internet users against "traffic analysis" which is often used by advertising companies to track your Internet use and create a profile of advertisements that would suit you.
The EFF sees traffic analysis as a threat to personal anonymity and privacy, confidential business activities and relationships, and state security. However, it is not known how the EFF will react to BT clients using the network for file sharing. The network wasn't designed for the volume of traffic required by this form of file sharing.
However it does appear that the EFF was expecting that Tor would be used by file sharers who might want to download copyrighted material anonymously. The EFF offers node maintainers a DMCA response template in case any DMCA complaints or threats are sent in their direction. While it is strongly advised not to use Tor for file sharing, those interested in how it's done should look here.
Source:
Broadband Reports

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