Author: rransom Date: 2011-02-22 03:30:33 +0000 (Tue, 22 Feb 2011) New Revision: 24253
Modified: website/trunk/getinvolved/en/volunteer.wml Log: Clean up TAILS project descriptions
Modified: website/trunk/getinvolved/en/volunteer.wml =================================================================== --- website/trunk/getinvolved/en/volunteer.wml 2011-02-22 02:29:09 UTC (rev 24252) +++ website/trunk/getinvolved/en/volunteer.wml 2011-02-22 03:30:33 UTC (rev 24253) @@ -990,18 +990,18 @@ Skill Level: <i>Low to Medium</i> <br> Likely Mentors: <i>intrigeri, anonym</i> - <p>Tor helps greatly publishing files anonymously. However, much personal - information can be enclosed *inside* such published files meta-data: GPS - coordinates, authors name and so on. Anyone who wants to anonymously + <p>Tor helps greatly in publishing files anonymously. However, much personal + information can be enclosed *inside* such published files' meta-data: GPS + coordinates, author's name and so on. Anyone who wants to anonymously publish a file can thus far too easily de-anonymize herself.</p> - <p>A set of tools allowing to easily inspect and cleanup meta-data in files + <p>A set of tools allowing users to easily inspect and clean up meta-data in files would benefit Tor users, and would e.g. be shipped in TAILS.</p> <p>A graphical user interface is a must, but library and command-line interfaces are most welcome so that future work can add support for - published files cleaning to various publishing tools, such as Desktop + cleaning published files to various publishing tools, such as desktop social networking clients and Web content management systems.</p> - <p>This project mostly consists in writing glue between the many existing - tools and libraries that provide read/write access to files meta-data. An + <p>This project mostly consists of writing glue between the many existing + tools and libraries that provide read/write access to files' meta-data. An extensible program design would probably be the best bet, so that support for other kinds of files can easily be added later.</p> <p>The meta-data cleaning toolkit would run at least on GNU/Linux; @@ -1021,15 +1021,15 @@ <br> Likely Mentors: <i>intrigeri, anonym</i> <p>Data persistence is a somewhat tricky topic in a Live system context, - especially one explicitly designed to avoid leaving any trace of its use - such as TAILS.</p> - <p>Some real-life usecases however require to setup some kind of data + especially one such as TAILS, which is explicitly designed to avoid + leaving any trace of its use.</p> + <p>Some real-life use cases, however, require some kind of data persistence. To start with, TAILS should (carefully) support persistence of application-specific configurations (e.g. GnuPG keyring) and of a user arbitrary data store. Note that persistence in TAILS will always be opt-in and require encrypted storage.</p> - <p>The backend part work consists in improving Debian Live existing - persistence features to make them suit the specific TAILS context. A trust + <p>The backend work consists of improving Debian Live's existing + persistence features to make them suit the specific context of TAILS. A trust relationship is already established with upstream who is happy to merge our changes. The codebase is not that small and much refactoring is needed, so this really is a programming project rather than a fire'n'forget shell @@ -1037,7 +1037,7 @@ <p>Anyone undertaking this project must be familiar with GNU/Linux, and preferably with Debian. Being able to (quickly learn to) write clean and safe programs in shell is also needed.</p> - <p>For more information see <a href="https://amnesia.boum.org/todo/persistence/">https://amnesia.boum.org/todo/persistence/</a></p> + <p>For more information, see <a href="https://amnesia.boum.org/todo/persistence/">https://amnesia.boum.org/todo/persistence/</a>.</p>
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