2. Use I2p for network connectivity and protect identity of client
* txi2p
+* Add "endpoint parameters" to Tahoe
+ * Servers provide the minimum client endpoint string required to connect to them:
+ * ``tcp:example.org:1337``
+ * ``ssl:example.org:443``
+ * ``i2p:longstring.b32.i2p``
+ * Clients may need to extend the strings with client-specific per-type parameters in order to successfully connect:
+ * ``tcp:example.org:1337:timeout=60``
+ * ``ssl:example.org:443:caCertsDir=/etc/ssl/certs``
+ * ``i2p:longstring.b32.i2p:tunnelNick=tahoe:inport=10000``
+ * These should be set in ``tahoe.cfg``:
+ * ``[node]clientEndpointParams = tcp:timeout=60,ssl:caCertsDir=/etc/ssl/certs,i2p:tunnelNick=tahoe:inport=10000``
+ * Tahoe parses, keeps an internal map, applies the relevant params to a client endpoint string before connecting
+* Client endpoint string whitelisting
+ * Server publishes an endpoint string for a client to connect to
+ * A malicious server could publish strings containing client-specific parameters that compromise the user
+ * Unsure what parameters could actually be used maliciously on their own, but definitely possible in concert with other attacks.
+ * The client should not accept strings that contain client-specific parameters
+ * How to tell the difference? Tahoe can't keep a list of everything that is safe.
+ * Maybe an endpoint API method that takes a client endpoint string and returns a safe one.
3. endpoint-agnostic Foolscap server side