This article is not about relays or exit nodes, but about bridges. Bridges are obfuscated ways to access the tor network. So you can run a bridge on a small budget (as long as you have good connectivity) and without any form of legal trouble. Please do it! :)
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What's the minimum resources needed to run a Tor server? Could it be done on a Raspberry Pi, for instance? And could it be made really easy for a non-techie like me to do it - say with a snap package?
I guess what I'm asking is : would a RPi, running Ubuntu Server + Tor Snap work?
Tor uses a lot of crypto operations so you're better off with beefier hardware than a raspberry pi (though a RPi4 would probably do the trick). But you need a somewhat-stable connection and IP address. Bandwidth and latency is what matters for onion routing.
Also, running a relay has close to zero consequences, but running an exit node can get you into trouble with your local authorities asking wtf are these and those requests coming from your IP. Overall, it's better to do it from a dedicated IP address.
:) Thank you for your response.
"Most people like to scream about privacy until they have to support the project in any meaningful way."
I remember there being an extension to the TBB that turns your browser instance into a relay/bridge? Can't find it though and forgot its name. Does someone know more about what I'm talking about?