Well if you use Tor somewhat regularly and check your exit node IP, it is about 50% possible that yours is in that subnet each time you renew the route. Which begs questions.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it would look more benign to have exit nodes distributed without this much bias towards that particular subnet.
It's only 185.220.100 [0] and 185.220.101 [1] that contain all those relays. Some of the bigger German families work together as "Stiftung Erneuerbare Freiheit" that's why you see a big cluster there. But Tor never uses relays in the same /16 for a circuit so it's not really an issue.
wartywhoa23|4 months ago
Maybe I'm wrong, but it would look more benign to have exit nodes distributed without this much bias towards that particular subnet.
bauruine|4 months ago
[0] https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#search/185.220.100 [1] https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#search/185.220.101
5f3cfa1a|4 months ago