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							- Filename: 128-bridge-families.txt
 
- Title: Families of private bridges
 
- Version: $Revision$
 
- Last-Modified: $Date$
 
- Author: Roger Dingledine
 
- Created: 2007-12-xx
 
- Status: Finished
 
- Implemented-In: 0.2.0.x
 
-   [This proposal is part implemented, and part dead (won't-implement).
 
-   Roger should add a note and merge it into the spec.]
 
- 1. Overview
 
-   Proposal 125 introduced the basic notion of how bridge authorities,
 
-   bridge relays, and bridge users should behave. But it doesn't get into
 
-   the various mechanisms of how to distribute bridge relay addresses to
 
-   bridge users.
 
-   One of the mechanisms we have in mind is called 'families of bridges'.
 
-   If a bridge user knows about only one private bridge, and that bridge
 
-   shuts off for the night or gets a new dynamic IP address, the bridge
 
-   user is out of luck and needs to re-bootstrap manually or wait and
 
-   hope it comes back. On the other hand, if the bridge user knows about
 
-   a family of bridges, then as long as one of those bridges is still
 
-   reachable his Tor client can automatically  learn about where the
 
-   other bridges have gone.
 
-   So in this design, a single volunteer could run multiple coordinated
 
-   bridges, or a group of volunteers could each run a bridge. We abstract
 
-   out the details of how these volunteers find each other and decide to
 
-   set up a family.
 
- somebody needs to run a bridge authority
 
- it needs to have a torrc option to publish networkstatuses of its bridges
 
- it should also do reachability testing just of those bridges
 
- people ask for the bridge networkstatus by asking for a url that
 
- contains a password. (it's safe to do this because of begin_dir.)
 
- so the bridge users need to know a) a password, and b) a bridge
 
- authority line.
 
- the bridge users need to know the bridge authority line.
 
- the bridge authority needs to know the password.
 
 
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