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"If you shut up truth, and bury it underground, it will but grow."
Emile Zola,
The setup behind the Tor Onion Netork is easy once you've understood how it works. Below you can see a picture of what a conection to any point in the Internet may look like through Tor.
An entry node (Tor Bridge) is the point of entrance to the Tor network. Usually, these are servers with limited computing capacity and bandwith. They serve users to enter the Tor network either by the front door and some other have additional software installed - obfsproxy - to offer more differienated ways of enerting the Tor network.
A middle node (Tor Relay) passes on the traffic within the Tor network to the next relay station and eventually to an exit node.
An exit node (Tor Exit Node) is the last part of the chain for a users traffic. Here it's going to be passed on to the destionation the user has choosen (i.e. http://ixquick.com/).
To accomplish our objectives, we need to get more exit nodes online. In order to do this, we focus to spent our gains right to the setup of exit nodes.
Finding reliable, freedom and privacy aware hosters is not a trivial task, so we encourage you to share your expericences with us, either on the mailing list, the wiki or simply drop us a mail.
We are an official mirror of the Tor Project and Tails - a live operating system to protect your privacy with the help of anonymity and encryption - website.
We also host an Globe - a tor relay and bridge explorer - instance at globe.enn.lu.