7% of 84 commercial IP blacklists proactively blacklist Tor exit relay IPs as a matter of policy: the Snort IP and Paid Aggregator blacklists listed newly deployed relay IPs within 3 hours of their first appearance in the Tor consensus and maintained the listing for the entire relay lifetime. In total, 88% of all Tor exits appear on at least one commercial blacklist, compared to 9% of VPNGate and 69% of HMA VPN endpoints.
From 2017-singh-characterizing — Characterizing the Nature and Dynamics of Tor Exit Blocking
· §5.2, §5.3, §5.6
· 2017
· USENIX Security Symposium
Implications
New Tor exit IPs are immediately identifiable via the public consensus — any circumvention approach using publicly enumerated Tor infrastructure inherits full reputation cost within hours; bridge-based or unlisted relay architectures avoid this.
VPN endpoints face substantially lower blacklisting rates (9–69%) than Tor exits (88%), confirming that infrastructure not enumerated in a public consensus maintains better service reachability.