Quote from: randomOVDB#2 on August 06, 2012, 10:21 amOne of Computer Chess Club's nodes.What I'm interested in, is the lack of Tor based email providers. We have nodes, we have websites but no email. Is setting up an email server really that different or that more difficult than setting up an on Tor website ? CCC, Tor Project, EFF... All credible and possible providers.To all people migrating from Tormail because of "something". Isnt't spreading FUD a known tactic of the enemy :-XComputer Chess Club? I think you were a bit tired when you wrote that, got to admit I read it the way you wrote it the first time :)Yeah, it is interesting that there is a lack of Tor based email providers for sure. I think that's partly a result of jurisdictional issues e.g. having the physical servers someplace where the government isn't necessarily going to kowtow to the U.S government or other ones. e.g. Russia, China (the irony).I think the practical issue is, like another person said, that while you might have a hidden service, you still need some nodes outside the Tor network, otherwise you're stuck with just an internal email system for Tor like TorPM. So, that node(s) is going to be seize-able as a result, hence the jurisdictional challenges. There ought to be some elegant privacy enhancing method (Guru was talking about a.a.m, but I don't know enough about it). There is probably already a solution in some crypto academic journal some place, but maybe it's not so well known.Yup, this could all be FUD, but then again Applebaum has been dogged by the FBI for long enough to obtain the correct type of intuitive paranoia. Besides like I said already, there's the more fundamental question of diversification. There ought to be a kaleidoscope of publicly available Tor based email services, I mean it's 2012, not 1995.