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				@@ -1616,8 +1616,10 @@ with a session key shared by Alice and Bob. 
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				 As of mid-January 2004, the Tor network consists of 16 nodes 
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				 (14 in the US, 2 in Europe), and more are joining each week as the code 
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				 matures.\footnote{For comparison, the current remailer network 
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				-has about 30 reliable nodes.} Each node has at least a 768Kb/768Kb 
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				-connection, and 
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				+has about 30 reliable nodes. We haven't asked PlanetLab to provide 
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				+more nodes, since their AUP wouldn't allow exit nodes (see also 
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				+\cite{darkside}) and because we aim to build a long-term community of 
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				+node operators.} Each node has at least a 768Kb/768Kb connection, and 
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				 most have 10Mb. The number of users varies (and of course, it's hard to 
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				 tell for sure), but we sometimes have several hundred users---admins at 
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				 several companies have started putting their entire department's web 
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				@@ -1680,7 +1682,7 @@ just needs to be sufficient to not shed users \cite{econymics,back01}. 
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				 Although Tor's clique topology and full-visibility directories present 
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				 scaling problems, we still expect the network to support a few hundred 
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				-nodes and perhaps 10,000 users, before we're forced to make the network 
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				+nodes and perhaps 10,000 users before we're forced to make the network 
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				 more distributed. With luck, the experience we gain running the current 
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				 topology will help us choose among alternatives when the time comes. 
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