Author: phobos Date: 2011-10-13 00:17:55 +0000 (Thu, 13 Oct 2011) New Revision: 25165
Modified: website/trunk/download/en/download-easy.wml website/trunk/download/en/download.wml Log: update the download warning text to point at tor browser, according to ticket 4224.
Modified: website/trunk/download/en/download-easy.wml =================================================================== --- website/trunk/download/en/download-easy.wml 2011-10-12 16:47:33 UTC (rev 25164) +++ website/trunk/download/en/download-easy.wml 2011-10-13 00:17:55 UTC (rev 25165) @@ -106,24 +106,24 @@
<ol> <li> -Tor only protects Internet applications that are configured to -send their traffic through Tor — it doesn't magically anonymize -all your traffic just because you install it. We recommend you -use <a href="http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/all-older.html">Firefox</a> with the <a -href="<page torbutton/index>">Torbutton</a> extension. +Tor only protects Internet applications that are configured to send +their traffic through Tor — it doesn't magically anonymize all +your traffic just because you install it. We recommend you use the +<a href="<page projects/torbrowser>">Tor Browser Bundle</a>. It is +pre-configured to protect your privacy and anonymity on the web. </li>
<li> -Torbutton blocks browser plugins such as Java, Flash, ActiveX, RealPlayer, -Quicktime, Adobe's PDF plugin, and others: they can be manipulated -into revealing your IP address. For example, that means Youtube is -disabled. If you really need your Youtube, you can <a href="<page -torbutton/torbutton-faq>#noflash">reconfigure Torbutton</a> to allow it; but -be aware that you're opening yourself up to potential attack. Also, -extensions like Google toolbar look up more information about the -websites you type in: they may bypass Tor and/or broadcast sensitive -information. Some people prefer using two browsers (one for Tor, one -for non-Tor browsing). +Tor Browser and Torbutton block browser plugins such as Java, Flash, +ActiveX, RealPlayer, Quicktime, Adobe's PDF plugin, and others: they +can be manipulated into revealing your IP address. For example, that +means Youtube is disabled. If you really need your Youtube, you can <a +href="<page torbutton/torbutton-faq>#noflash">reconfigure Torbutton</a> +to allow it; but be aware that you're opening yourself up to potential +attack. Also, extensions like Google toolbar look up more information +about the websites you type in: they may bypass Tor and/or broadcast +sensitive information. Some people prefer using two browsers (one for Tor, +one for non-Tor browsing). </li>
<li>
Modified: website/trunk/download/en/download.wml =================================================================== --- website/trunk/download/en/download.wml 2011-10-12 16:47:33 UTC (rev 25164) +++ website/trunk/download/en/download.wml 2011-10-13 00:17:55 UTC (rev 25165) @@ -286,24 +286,24 @@
<ol> <li> -Tor only protects Internet applications that are configured to -send their traffic through Tor — it doesn't magically anonymize -all your traffic just because you install it. We recommend you -use <a href="http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/all-older.html">Firefox</a> with the <a -href="<page torbutton/index>">Torbutton</a> extension. +Tor only protects Internet applications that are configured to send +their traffic through Tor — it doesn't magically anonymize all +your traffic just because you install it. We recommend you use the +<a href="<page projects/torbrowser>">Tor Browser Bundle</a>. It is +pre-configured to protect your privacy and anonymity on the web. </li>
<li> -Torbutton blocks browser plugins such as Java, Flash, ActiveX, RealPlayer, -Quicktime, Adobe's PDF plugin, and others: they can be manipulated -into revealing your IP address. For example, that means Youtube is -disabled. If you really need your Youtube, you can <a href="<page -torbutton/torbutton-faq>#noflash">reconfigure Torbutton</a> to allow it; but -be aware that you're opening yourself up to potential attack. Also, -extensions like Google toolbar look up more information about the -websites you type in: they may bypass Tor and/or broadcast sensitive -information. Some people prefer using two browsers (one for Tor, one -for non-Tor browsing). +Tor Browser and Torbutton block browser plugins such as Java, Flash, +ActiveX, RealPlayer, Quicktime, Adobe's PDF plugin, and others: they +can be manipulated into revealing your IP address. For example, that +means Youtube is disabled. If you really need your Youtube, you can <a +href="<page torbutton/torbutton-faq>#noflash">reconfigure Torbutton</a> +to allow it; but be aware that you're opening yourself up to potential +attack. Also, extensions like Google toolbar look up more information +about the websites you type in: they may bypass Tor and/or broadcast +sensitive information. Some people prefer using two browsers (one for Tor, +one for non-Tor browsing). </li>
<li>
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