> I don't know about 94% of TOR traffic being fraudulent but I'm sure it's high.
I was curious and ran a quick check on my servers. 5 servers, about 300 domains, checked my logs going back 1 week. I could find just ONE legitimate session. Everything else was something trying to break WordPress or PHPMyAdmin or something else. I'd love to support Tor but I feel like I can't fight this fight.
While still higher than regular ISP addresses, VPN abuse should be significantly lower than Tor abuse on account of these services costing real money. And nearly all of them not accepting anonymous forms of payment.
I expect my VPN use to keep me hidden amongst a crowd from various internet companies trying to track and profile me; but I don't expect for a minute that it offers protection against criminal activities (and I have no intention of engaging in such things.) Any intelligent criminal would likely feel the same way and not use a service with their real billing information to commit crimes. Especially with Tor available.
Yet despite this, I am constantly hit by CloudFlare captchas on sites that are very clearly not being hit by DoS traffic. Further, it seems site operators don't even realize this is happening. When I reported the captcha issue to Zotac's Twitter account, they had no idea CloudFlare was doing this.
Google is also a huge offender with the captchas. I'm this close to switching to Duck Duck Go. Facebook is too, but I'm fine with not ever going there.
I was curious and ran a quick check on my servers. 5 servers, about 300 domains, checked my logs going back 1 week. I could find just ONE legitimate session. Everything else was something trying to break WordPress or PHPMyAdmin or something else. I'd love to support Tor but I feel like I can't fight this fight.