lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
Exactly, and here we have disadro21us, discussuser and postman. Apart from postman, who only showed an interest in this forum once when explicitly notified by the community (me, or Gillis), the names fori2padmin18, disadro21us and discussuser are unknown to everyone.
That's strange, since everyone else uses their alias when they want to score a few points to move up in the perceived social structure.
Maybe that's just the vocal minority though? There are many people who sign up for both forums but do not post anything.
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
In addition, there is a
Tacker WebUI, which is administratively managed in exactly the same form as the
forum rules here, which have only been made a little more verbose for the more obtuse participants.
What's that? I've never heard of it.
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
(By the way, last week Team Postman deleted a torrent that was supposed to support your I2PSnark research. There was nothing illegal, even the anonymous IDs were blacked out.)
I suppose i might have seen something like a picture listed in the Latest section of PATracker (i've not downloaded it though). If that's what we're talking about, maybe it was just too small, for a couple of kilobytes to be put up as a torrent? (Why didn't they just put it up on a share file site?)
Even then, are you sure that it was Team Postman who deleted it? Maybe the uploader themselves deleted it (i know you can delete your torrents from Tracker if they have no seeds, or something along these lines).
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
And why don't the admins sit down with the users and look for a solution together? Because they are afraid of being exposed, because it could come out that people are helping each other out here.
What is wrong with "helping each other out"? Or is there hidden meaning in your words?
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
Which means they have access to the destinations of the participants.
Generally, a site hoster in i2p knows the clients' destinations. Because destinations in I2P are comparable to IP addresses on the regular internet (except not linked to real-world identities).
There is even a project that can track people across multiple eepsites (if they cooperate/collude) to find out that one person is visiting these eepsites.
That doesn't mean that this is unfixable. You can use multiple HTTP proxies (each proxy gets a different destination) and imitate multiple identities. Many faces! (And don't forget to have different fingerprints for the browsers, but that is not I2P's problem.)
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
User CL uploads a handful of [...] to the tracker and then goes to the forum to talk about [...]. The admins have a look at the connection data and realise that he is a hypocrite.
Assuming this is a hypothetical user.
See, the user could've used one destination for uploading (i.e. registering for Tracker and submitting), and another for posting (i.e. registering on a forum and submitting post). Then they would've appeared as two people, there's no way to distinguish them.
(Side note: torrent clients already create their own destinations.)
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
And when I talk about infrastructure, I mean the hardware on which all this runs and whose rent someone has to pay. A few years ago, you could still see who received how much money for which purposes on the page you linked. Because this transparent disclosure revealed internal entanglements, it was not continued. Today, you have to proceed differently if you want to know on which servers of which company and subsidiary the infrastructure is hosted.
I've browsed two internet archives and couldn't find a page with the money.
(Or could have they silently removed it? No way! Total world conspiracy!)
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
You must have noticed the last paragraph, ‘Inclusion’, when you linked the page. The project manager at the time did not dare to object to the registration or at least demand a discussion about it, even though the source code is on Microsoft's servers. This should illustrate the prevailing power imbalance in the western part. There are other reasons, but because of what I have said, I think it is important not to become dependent on individual providers.
My information is that this section was silently added by the site administrator some time ago, and some people didn't like it. That's all I know.
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
That's why I like alternatives like MuWire.
Is there any reason to jump to a different and incompatible piece of software, even though you could've joined the (probably more popular) bittorrent "community"?
The more people compatible with each other, the better.
I'm not saying everyone should rely only on Postman's Tracker.
The problem with using a less-popular and incompatible alternative like Muwire is that it's not as easy to move data from an older place.
With a torrent tracker, you just grab the infohashes and add them to the new one. No rehashing or anything necessary. In fact, that's now cross-seeding from the Clearnet works right now. People bring torrents from clearnet trackers and add them to Postman's tracker.
Same thing can be done if people want to migrate to a different tracker.
And by using complementary open trackers and DHT, you can even retain the seeders without them having to do anything. (So Postman's tracker is more like a searchable index of torrents, with comments and ratings.)
Bittorrent is even more decentralized by having multiple independent implementations - i2psnark, bbt, libtorrent-rasterbar.
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
I don't really care about these half-heartedly run forums. This one, for example, was created to get the ongoing discussions and all things human off the PaT wishlist. They all seem like children's tables at a family party to me. And I also assume that they can disappear at any time after the game without notice. And it doesn't seem to be just me, because as I said before, the majority of conversations take place on the internet and on social media. So people are afraid to speak their minds here, in a network that is supposedly fighting for more freedom. But maybe I'm wrong and the omerta, the mafia's duty of confidentiality, applies and nobody has told me that?
People talk where it is more convenient to talk. It's more convenient to talk on reddit because it's accessible from clearnet (and from the phone!) and they already had accounts there.
Looking at the topics on reddit, it doesn't seem anything scary (anything that people would be afraid "to speak their minds"). So they could've just talked here. But they wanted to talk on reddit, presumably because it's more convenient. And because there are more people there.
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
The real alternative to phpBB brown and blue is retrobbs.i2p. However, its interface provokes the broken windows effect. But I would rather have a contemporary GUI in a neat environment that doesn't evoke such associations in the first place. Whether with or without JavaScript is the same to me, just as phpBB is only fully usable with JS, the Tor-Browser also comes with JS switched on.
How is retrobbs different from another ordinary forum (set aside the interface)? Is it, like, federated with other forums, like Usenet? Or something? That'd be kinda cool. In that there'd be no single point of centralization. (a little bit searching slightly confirms my guess, but i'd like to know more things.)
Additional investigation lead to finding a similar-looking forum but with different content - novabbs.i2p.
lgillis wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 12:15 pm
I'm still talking about freedom of speech and not the nonsense that some people obviously associate with the darknet.
I wasn't really talking about whatever "nonsense" either. People may come to here for different reasons.