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this post was submitted on 30 Jan 2026
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Privacy
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Alright, I already "umm, ackshually'd" someone in this thread but this post in particular hit a nerve with me. The Tor security model is based on 3 hops but does not guarantee 3 different jurisdictions. Their circuit building only takes into account "jurisdiction" in the way we're using it here if you use guard nodes or specific cases when you cannot access the network directly or look like you're exiting from a Tor node.
That said, it's still a very strong project and security model. And everything you said about spreading out your providers without a single point of failure (or pressure) applies.
I haven’t looked in the tor protocol for more than a decade but if routing was done based on traditional networking parameters (ttl distance, ping, etc) pretty sure you would end up all your nodes in your jurisdiction.
If you were using pure random, routing may involve only US (where there are a significant percentage of nodes)
Instead you can see that rarely there are two nodes in the same jurisdiction.
Years ago there were a config file mapping countries to jurisdictions and maybe that has been ditched but still I don’t buy that it is pure random or using traditional routing criteria