Author

Topic: Can the bitcoin network run entirely inside Tor? (Read 758 times)

newbie
Activity: 7
Merit: 0
Wouldn't that be dangerous with nods able to snoop transactions?
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
If a government decides to block bitcoin can the miners and the clients exit via Tor network?

Going further... If all the governments decide to block the bitcoin network... can it run inside Tor entirely?

It can probably be run through a VPN service, though I've never tried to do that.
member
Activity: 63
Merit: 10
Vires in Numeris
I don't think so. Connecting to a node normally requires that node to have port 8333 forwarded to the bitcoin client, but in Tor you generally are assigned a port >32768 which can't be used for Bitcoin. Also, setting up a tor hidden service wouldn't work because peer discovery is locked into IPv4 and IPv6 which can't be used for a tor hidden service.
legendary
Activity: 4536
Merit: 3188
Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
You can easily configure Bitcoin to connect though Tor (in Options -> Network, turn on "Connect through SOCKS proxy" - the default proxy settings are for a standard Tor installation, though you will need to change them if your Tor setup is non-standard). You can also run Bitcoin as a hidden service, though (I'm pretty sure) other Tor nodes won't be able to connect to you automatically - to connect to hidden Bitcoin services, you need to manually set up each hidden service you want to connect to.

The wiki says that "...the network won't work if everyone does this. BitCoin requires that some country is still free." though I have no idea why it won't work. It seems to me like it should (though it would require some effort set it up), but maybe I'm missing something obvious. Huh
newbie
Activity: 52
Merit: 0
If a government decides to block bitcoin can the miners and the clients exit via Tor network?

Going further... If all the governments decide to block the bitcoin network... can it run inside Tor entirely?



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